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Actors We've Sadly Lost So Far In 2022 - Video học tiếng Anh
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Actors We've Sadly Lost So Far In 2022
Actors We've Sadly Lost So Far In 2022
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Phụ đề (224)
0:00
A four-time Oscar nominee, a favorite of director Stanley Kubrick, and
0:05
multiple mobsters. Let's take a closer look into the lives of the stars we've lost so far in 2022.
0:12
Iconic singer and actor Meat Loaf, who won a Grammy for his hit ballad "I'd Do Anything For
0:17
Love (But I Won't Do That)" and appeared in films like "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" and "Fight
0:22
Club," died in January 2022. His manager confirmed the news to The New York Times,
0:27
but did not immediately reveal the cause of death. He was 74.
0:31
Born Marvin Lee Aday, the Dallas native adopted his childhood nickname as a stage name
0:36
early in his career. He got his big break when he auditioned for the off-Broadway musical
0:41
"More Than You Deserve" in the early '70s. He won a role and formed a lifelong partnership
0:46
with writer Jim Steinman, who would go on to pen Meat Loaf's debut album, 1977's "Bat Out of Hell."
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Todd Rundgren produced the record, and everyone from the New York Philharmonic to members of the
0:58
E Street Band contributed. It was an unlikely hit that critics begrudgingly praised, though
1:04
Meat Loaf would struggle to replicate its success in the years that followed. After a few flops,
1:09
he dropped 1993's "Bat Out of Hell II: Back Into Hell," which included his Grammy-winning single.
1:15
In terms of films, Meat Loaf is best known for playing Eddie the delivery boy
1:19
in 1975's "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" and former bodybuilder Bob
1:24
Paulson in 1999's "Fight Club." Other notable credits include 1992's "Wayne's World,"
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2001's "The 51st State," and "Ghost Wars," on which he recurred between 2017 and 2018.
1:38
Comedian and actor Bob Saget, best known for his long stint on the sitcom "Full
1:42
House," died in January 2022 in his hotel room. There was no evidence of drug use or foul play,
1:49
according to Chief Medical Examiner Joshua Stephany. He was 65. His wife,
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Kelly Rizzo Saget, said in a statement, per Variety,
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"I am so completely shattered and in disbelief."
2:00
Saget made his TV debut as Bob the Comic in a 1981 episode of the Tom Hanks sitcom
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"Bosom Buddies." In 1987, he won the part of Danny Tanner on "Full House,"
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which became a career-defining role. Saget played the widowed father of three from 1987 to 1995,
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and reprised the role in the Netflix-produced sequel series, "Fuller House."
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"Well just remember, when children seem the least lovable, means they need love the most."
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It was often hectic on set, but Saget had fond memories of working with his
2:31
onscreen kids. The actor told Vanity Fair in 2014,
2:35
"Jodie Sweetin was four when she started, Ashley and Mary-Kate were nine months,
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Candace was nine — you're talking about exceptionally talented young kids."
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Elsewhere, Saget was known as the voice of the older Ted Mosby on "How I Met Your Mother"
2:48
and as the host of "America's Funniest Home Videos," which he fronted for almost a decade.
2:54
French actor Gaspard Ulliel was best known to international audiences for his turn
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as the young Hannibal Lecter. Sadly, he died due to a skiing accident in January
3:04
2022, as reported by Deadline. He was 37.
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Ulliel began his career on French television in the late 1990s,
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and was landing film roles by the early 2000s. His big break arrived in 2004,
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when he landed the part of Manech in "A Very Long Engagement." Ulliel won his
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first Cesar award for this movie and would make the transition to Hollywood soon after,
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playing the titular killer in the 2007 prequel film "Hannibal Rising." It was one of his biggest
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roles at the time of his death. But the actor was also about to make his debut as a Marvel villain.
3:38
Sadly, Ulliel died a few months before Marvel's "Moon Knight" dropped. He plays Anton Mogart, aka
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Midnight Man, a black market antiquities dealer who goes head to head with the titular hero.
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Emmy winner Louie Anderson, who appeared in films like "Ferris Bueller's Day
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Off" and "Coming to America," died of complications from cancer in January 2022,
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his publicist confirmed to CNN. He was 68. Tributes from across the entertainment world
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poured in after the news broke. Screenwriter Carl Kurlander wrote in a Deadline tribute piece,
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"I was one of the lucky ones who got to call Louie a friend. He made me
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and others in his orbit feel like family."
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Anderson decided to give stand-up a go after his colleagues dared him to go on stage.
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The audience loved him, and it wasn't long before he was making his mark in the comedy world.
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Anderson's talent and career were multifaceted.
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He was as comfortable in front of a crowd as he was fronting game shows. Indeed,
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he would become a fixture on American TV screens as the host of "Family Feud" from 1999 to 2002.
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Anderson plied his trade on shows like "Grace Under Fire," "Touched by an Angel," "Chicago
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Hope," and "Scrubs," but some of his best work came in the twilight of his career.
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Anderson was nominated for Emmys three years running for his performance on the
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Zach Galifianakis-led FX comedy "Baskets," winning in 2016.
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"Oh, presents! Unnecessary."
5:03
Hollywood legend Sidney Poitier, widely seen as the first Black movie star, died in January 2022
5:09
at the age of 94, as confirmed by The New York Times. Barack Obama said in a tweet,
5:15
"Through his groundbreaking roles and singular talent, Sidney Poitier
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epitomized dignity and grace, revealing the power of movies to bring us closer together."
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Denzel Washington said of him in an interview with People,
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"He was a gentle man and opened doors for all of us that had been closed for years."
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Poitier earned his first credited film role, Dr. Luther Brooks, in 1950's "No Way Out."
5:38
He actively avoided demeaning roles, and by the end of the decade, his persistence began paying
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off. He became the first Black man to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor in 1959,
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blowing critics away with his turn as an escaped prisoner in "The Defiant Ones."
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He missed out on that occasion, but would make history a few years later when he became
5:58
the first Black man to win that award for his performance as an traveling laborer in 1963's
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"Lilies of the Field." How did Poitier feel about opening so
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many doors for Black actors and artists everywhere? He once told Oprah Winfrey,
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"It's been an enormous responsibility. And I accepted it, and I lived in a
6:16
way that showed how I respected that responsibility. I had to."
6:20
Up-and-coming actor Moses J. Moseley was found dead in Georgia in January 2022.
6:25
His agent, Tabatha Minchew, told The Hollywood Reporter,
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"Moses was a very talented person, with a bright light around him. He will be missed
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deeply by his friends, family and fans. Always a ball of happy energy around him."
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The cause of death was not immediately revealed by authorities, who launched an investigation
6:44
to determine the circumstances. He was 31. A native of South Carolina,
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Moseley studied at Georgia State University before settling down in Atlanta.
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According to The Hollywood Reporter, he worked as a model before transitioning into acting.
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Moseley's first credited role was playing Michonne's pet walker Mike on "The Walking
7:03
Dead" in 2012. He would appear on the hit AMC show half a dozen times over the next few years.
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Moseley went on to play Tic Toc on USA Network's "Queen of the South,"
7:13
an usher on HBO's critically-acclaimed "Watchmen" series, and Kadeem on Irv Gotti's
7:18
"Tales." His most notable feature film was 2017's "Attack of the Southern Fried
7:23
Zombies," in which he played Robbie. Moseley had several projects in various stages of
7:28
production when he was reported missing by his family, including "Hank" and "Cadillac Respect."
7:34
Academy Award winner William Hurt — who owned the '80s with hits like "The Big Chill" and
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"Gorky Park" — died in March 2022. The actor was 71 years old, and as his son,
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Will, said in a statement via Variety,
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"He died peacefully, among family, of natural causes."
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Although not initially publicly confirmed, we now know that Hurt died from complications of
7:55
prostate cancer; he was first diagnosed in 2018. Born in Washington, D.C., Hurt studied theology
8:04
at Tufts before finding his passion in acting. The actor made his debut film performance with
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"Altered States," a psychedelic trip that mixes mushrooms, religious imagery, and body horror.
8:15
He followed that up with the sexy noir flick "Body Heat" — the film that propelled him to stardom.
8:20
After that, Hurt won a Best Actor Oscar for his portrayal of gay prisoner Luis Molina in
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"Kiss of the Spider Woman." It was just the first of four times he'd be up for an Oscar,
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with the Academy nominating his work for "Children of a Lesser God," "Broadcast
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News," and "A History of Violence." Fans will also recognize Hurt from projects like "The Village"
8:40
and "A.I. Artificial Intelligence." Of course, the man also left his stamp on the superhero genre
8:46
by playing Thaddeus Ross, the MCU antagonist who pursued Bruce Banner and Natasha Romanoff.
8:53
Estelle Harris came to fame as an actor well into adulthood,
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most familiar to TV audiences as Estelle Costanza, the combative,
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shrill-voiced mother of George Costanza on the mega-popular '90s sitcom "Seinfeld."
9:06
"Oh, I can't believe it. Frank, come here!."
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Harris appeared in nearly 30 episodes of the series. She also used that distinctive
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angry voice in a number of other projects post-"Seinfeld," including the "Toy Story"
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movies, as Mrs. Potato Head, "Brother Bear," "Teacher's Pet," and "Futurama."
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But Harris was much more than an argumentative, uniquely voiced maternal figure. She had more
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than 100 acting credits to her name, all of them coming in her late 40s and beyond.
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Harris started her acting career in community theater, regional theater,
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and summer stock before segueing into TV with appearances in commercials.
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According to CNN, she once appeared in 25 nationally broadcast ads in one year.
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According to a statement from Harris' son, Glen, via agent Michael Eisenstadt,
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Estelle Harris died on April 2, 2022. A cause of death was not provided; the actor was 93.
10:00
Never a leading man and almost always a supporting character in broad comedies and family movies,
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Gilbert Gottfried became a household name because of his public and on-screen persona.
10:10
It's hard not to forget that perpetually irate,
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squinting malcontent screaming his thoughts in a shrill, scratchy, overblown New York accent.
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"I can't believe it! I just don't believe it!"
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After a major breakthrough as a member of the cast of "Saturday Night Live" in the early 1980s,
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Gottfried became a fixture in '80s and '90s movies, oft-rerun cultural touchstones for kids
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and teens who grew up in that era. He played Sidney Bernstein in "Beverly Hills Cop II,"
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Mr. Peabody in all three "Problem Child" movies, and voiced Iago
10:43
in "Aladdin." He also voiced the Aflac duck in a long-running series of insurance commercials.
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That's to say nothing of his dozens of other appearances in TV shows and movies,
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making use of his purposely annoying all-purpose characterization. Gottfried was also a
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relentlessly performing stand-up comedian and a dark and twisted one favored by other knock-around
11:04
comics, as evidenced by his appearances on Comedy Central's series of celebrity roasts.
11:10
On April 12, 2022, Gottfried's Twitter account broke the news that the actor and comedian
11:15
had died following an unspecified "long illness." Gottfried was 67.
11:21
Mike Hagerty was among the most prolific and recognizable character actors of the last 40
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years, popping up in more than 100 movies and TV shows. He usually played a gruff,
11:31
blue-collar, working man type with a big mustache and pronounced Chicagoan accent.
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Among Hagerty's most familiar roles, there's Davey, a cable TV station employee in "Wayne's
11:41
World" and apartment building superintendent Mr. Treeger on "Friends," who becomes Joey's
11:46
ballroom dance partner. He also played best friend of the main character in the
11:50
original "Overboard," an auto shop owner on "Lucky Louie," and a main cast role
11:56
on "The George Carlin Show." Hagerty recently played a captain on multiple episodes of
12:00
"Brooklyn Nine-Nine," appeared on "Shameless," and played farmer Ed Miller on "Somebody Somewhere."
12:06
On her Instagram page, "Somebody Somewhere" star Bridget Everett reported that Hagerty had
12:10
died on May 5, 2022, in Los Angeles. A cause of death was later revealed to be a seizure
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as a result of an adverse reaction to antibiotics. He was 67 years old.
12:22
One of the finest and most recognizable actors of his era,
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Ray Liotta alternated between rugged leading man roles and quirky character actor parts,
12:31
usually playing tough guys, criminals, and intimidating figures,
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as well as frequently sending up his public image as a man of simmering, unhinged intensity.
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"Who you think we're talking to?"
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Liotta was a prolific actor, appearing in more than 100 movies and TV shows since the 1980s.
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He broke out in a big way with back-to-back roles as the ghost of Shoeless Joe Jackson
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in 1989's "Field of Dreams" and real-life Mafia big shot Henry Hill in "Goodfellas,"
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Martin Scorsese's classic crime epic that would earn six Oscar nominations. That film
13:04
solidified Liotta's specialty of playing men just barely on one side of the law or the other,
13:09
similar to his performances in "Something Wild," "Cop Land," "Unlawful Entry,"
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"Narc," "Observe and Report," "Shades of Blues," and "The Many Saints of Newark."
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According to Deadline, Liotta was in the Dominican Republic in May 2022
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filming the movie "Dangerous Waters," when he died in his sleep. He was 67.
13:28
In a career spanning more than 200 roles back to the early 1970s, Philip Baker Hall became a
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quintessential character actor. He's probably best known to audiences as Lt. Joe Bookman,
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a "library cop" tenaciously investigating Jerry Seinfeld for a decades-overdue book
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on the comedian's titular show. You'll also likely recognize him as the intimidating but
13:50
secretly sweet neighbor Walt on "Modern Family," Doctor Morrison on "Curb Your
13:54
Enthusiasm," and hippo game show host Hank Hippopopalous on "BoJack Horseman."
14:00
Writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson also cast Hall in prominent roles in his first
14:04
three features — "Hard Eight," "Boogie Nights," and "Magnolia."
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According to Hall's daughter, via The Hollywood Reporter,
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the actor died at home in Glendale, California, on June 12, 2022. Hall was 90 years old.
14:17
A chameleonic and frequently employed character actor, Joe Turkel racked up
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a whopping 142 credits over a career that spanned from the late 1940s to the 1990s.
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Of course, he's most closely associated with the films of Stanley Kubrick, who cast the
14:33
actor in three films. Turkel starred in "The Killing" and "Paths of Glory," but he's most
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famous for his appearance in "The Shining," where he played the creepy ghost hotel bartender Lloyd.
14:44
Turkel was virtually retired by the 1980s, when Ridley Scott hired him
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to play replicant maker Dr. Eldon Tyrell in the 1982 sci-fi classic "Blade Runner."
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Other than those major film works, Turkel was a constant presence over decades of television,
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with one-shot roles on dozens of memorable shows, including "Miami Vice," "Fantasy
15:04
Island," "Kojak," "The Andy Griffith Show," "Bonanza," "Ironside," and "Combat!"
15:09
According to Variety, Turkel died in a Santa Monica,
15:11
California, hospital on June 27, 2022. He was 94.
15:16
One of the best and most definitive actors of his generation, James Caan starred in
15:21
some of the most highly regarded films of the latter half of the 20th century.
15:25
Usually playing tough guys, criminals, intimidating dudes,
15:28
macho men, and inscrutable patriarchs, Caan paid his dues on 1960s TV dramas like "Naked City,"
15:35
"The Untouchables," and "Wagon Train." Moving into different roles in the early 1970s, Caan starred
15:41
as the title character in the adaptation of John Updike's "Rabbit Run" and played
15:45
real-life football player Brian Piccolo in the acclaimed made-for-TV tearjerker "Brian's Song."
15:50
"Aye-yuh, sounds like a ball."
15:52
He found probably his most iconic role ever as Sonny Corleone in "The Godfather,"
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for which he received an Oscar nomination. Later in his career,
16:02
Caan would land memorable starring roles in "Alien Nation," "Misery," "Honeymoon in
16:06
Vegas," and "Elf," and join the frothy NBC drama "Las Vegas." Sadly, on July 7, 2022,
16:13
Caan's family announced on Twitter that the actor died the previous evening. He was 82.
16:19
Tony Sirico found the role of his life as Peter Paul Gualtieri, aka Paulie Walnuts,
16:24
on HBO's universally acclaimed modern-day Mafia saga "The Sopranos." An explosive, funny,
16:30
and loyal lieutenant to mob boss Tony Soprano, Sirico provided comic relief as Paulie Walnuts,
16:37
offering up terse one-liners and amusing mispronunciations.
16:41
"What do ya hear, what do you say?!"
16:44
He played similar characters in "Goodfellas," "Bullets Over Broadway," and "Mighty Aphrodite."
16:49
In recent years, and after "The Sopranos" ended, Sirico traded
16:53
on his image and tendency to be typecast, playing tough characters on comedy shows,
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like a gangster on "American Dad" and a gruff dog on "Family Guy." Sirico's manager confirmed
17:04
to media outlets that the actor died on Friday, July 8, 2022. He was 79.
17:10
Actor Dale Critchlow, who was best known for playing Lyle the farmer in the offbeat cult
17:14
classic "Napoleon Dynamite," died in February 2022, as reported by Deadline. He was 92.
17:21
A native of Utah who moved to Idaho in his 30s, Critchlow landed his small but memorable role
17:27
by pure chance. The film was shot on location in Idaho, where Critchlow lived and
17:32
worked as a real farmer. He needed help with his animals one day, so his wife reached
17:36
out to the mother of writer-director Jared Hess. He told East Idaho News,
17:40
"My wife called Jared Hess' mother and asked if one of her boys was there.
17:44
He came over, and he had a friend with him. I drove the truck out into the pasture,
17:48
and the sheep came over. They grabbed those bucks and pushed them into the
17:52
truck [...] and then later, he came back and [said], 'I want you to be in my movie.'"
17:56
Critchlow became well known in his hometown of Preston after the film became a success,
18:00
and was always happy to pose for pictures. He went on to feature in another comedy,
18:05
2006's "Church Ball," which was considerably less successful. But Critchlow remained famous
18:11
for his turn in "Napoleon Dynamite," despite not being overly keen on the film. He said in 2020,
18:17
"I thought it was kind of funny in places, and in a few places, it was kind of dragged out."
18:26
Other celebrities lost this year: