BBC News: Breaking News Legendary actor Gene Hackman and his wife are causing heartache for fans, they were found in separate rooms at their home in New Mexico in a state of…. see more

Gene Hackman, the screen actor with iconic roles in The French Connection and Superman, has died. He was 95.

The bodies of the actor and his wife, classical pianist Betsy Arakawa, 64, were found at their home in Santa Fe Summit on Wednesday, Feb. 26.

A spokesperson for the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s office tells PEOPLE that deputies were dispatched to a home in Old Sunset Trail in Hyde Park where Hackman, Arakawa and one dog were found dead. Foul play is not suspected at this time, they add, and causes of death are still being determined in the ongoing investigation.

Born Eugene Allen Hackman in San Bernardino, California, in 1930, he moved frequently with his family, eventually landing in Danville, Illinois, where his father worked for a newspaper press. As a boy, Hackman often found himself escaping to movie theaters, where he idolized stars like Erroll Flynn, Edward G. Robinson and his favorite, Jimmy Cagney.

When Hackman was 13, his father left the family, waving a hand to his son as he left. “It was so precise. Maybe that’s why I became an actor,” Hackman once told Vanity Fair in 2013 of that parting gesture. “I doubt I would’ve become so sensitive to human behavior if that hadn’t happened to me as a child — if I hadn’t realized how much one small gesture can mean.”

Three years later, after a night in jail for stealing candy and soda, Hackman enlisted in the Marines, serving until he was 19. After his discharge, he bounced around, living in New York, Florida and his childhood home, Danville, and marrying his girlfriend, Faye Maltese, in 1956. (They would divorce 30 years later.) The pair later moved to California, where Hackman joined the famed Pasadena Playhouse. While there, Hackman forged a friendship with another aspiring actor, Dustin Hoffman.

Hackman, however, was kicked out of the Playhouse and, deciding to prove them wrong, headed to New York City where he was determined to make it as an actor. He landed a small part in a two-week production of Arthur Miller’s play A View from the Bridge.

In New York, Hackman kicked around for years, hanging out with Hoffman and Robert Duvall, taking small parts as they came. It wasn’t until he was in his mid-thirties that Hackman finally landed a role that got him noticed, playing Warren Beatty‘s brother in Bonnie and Clyde (1967). As Buck Barrow in the incendiary film, Hackman earned his first Oscar nomination in 1968 out of five.Three years later, Hackman was nominated for a second Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his role in the 1970’s I Never Sang for My Father. But it was his leading role in 1971’s The French Connection that solidified his status as a Hollywood leading man and earned him the Oscar for Best Actor in 1972.

Hackman pursued more diverse roles in 1972’s The Poseidon Adventure, Francis Ford Coppola’s 1974 film The Conversation (1974) where Hackman plays a surveillance expert who thinks a couple is about to be murdered.

Ned Beatty, Gene Hackman in Superman . Warner Bros/Dc Comics/Kobal/Shu

He also portrayed a hard-charging coach in 1986’s Hoosiers, the war-mongering submarine captain in Crimson Tide (1995).

And he was Lex Luthor in the 1978 film Superman, which may have seemed an odd choice of vehicle for a man bent on making his bones as a serious actor, but with more than 80 movies on his resume, Hackman made room for silliness.

For every bit of fun like the animated film Antz (1998) or The Birdcage (1996) with Robin Williams and Nathan Lane, there were indelible turns in Mississippi Burning, which earned Hackman his fourth Academy Award nomination in 1989, and Clint Eastwood’s Unforgiven, for which Hackman took home his second Oscar in 1993, as a loathsome sheriff.

Hackman retired from acting after starring in the 2004 comedy Welcome to Mooseport. Just a few years before, he’d once again thrilled audiences in Wes Anderson’s The Royal Tenenbaums as the dying patriarch of a family of kooky geniuses (including Anjelica Huston, Gwyneth Paltrow, Ben Stiller and Luke Wilson). But after a career that spanned cinema’s rebirth in the late ’60s to the new century, Hackman decided he’d done enough.

In 2004, Hackman told Larry King in an interview that his career was “probably all over,” and that he had no new scripts in front of him. Confirming his retirement in 2008, he expanded on his thoughts several years later, telling GQ in 2011 that it would take a lot for him to make another film.

Gene Hackman with Nathan Lane, Robin Williams and Dianne Wiest in The Birdcage . Everett Collection

Gene Hackman in Hoosiers. Orion/Kobal/Shutterstock

“I don’t know. If I could do it in my own house, maybe, without them disturbing anything and just one or two people,” he said, later telling the outlet that he just hopes to be remembered “as a decent actor.”

While on a book tour for his novel Escape from Andersonville in 2008, Hackman told the Raleigh News & Observerhe didn’t want to “keep pressing” and risk “going out on a sour note“I feel comfortable with what I’ve done,” he said.Hackman turned to painting and did voice-over work and writing books. He penned the old west story Payback at Morning Peak (2011) and the police thriller Pursuit (2013), as well as co-authoring three works of historical fiction with undersea archeologist Daniel Lenihan.

He has since narrated two documentary films: The Unknown Flag Raiser of Iwo Jim (2016) and We, the Marines (2017).

In addition to one of the most staggering filmographies in the business, his writing, theater notices and his painting, Hackman leaves behind his three children who he shared with his first wife, Maltese: Christopher Allen, Elizabeth Jean and Leslie Ann Hackman.

Asked by GQ in 2011 as to how he would like to be remembered, Hackman humbly replied, “As a decent actor. As someone who tried to portray what was given to them in an honest fashion. I don’t know, beyond that.”

Related Posts

SAD: Heartbreaking news for America’s Got Talent judge Simon Cowell as he confirms he has… See more

In a shocking and deeply saddening turn of events, the passing of Simon Cowell, the renowned America’s Got Talent judge and a leading figure in the entertainment industry, has been…

Read more

BREAK UP! CHRIS HEMSWORTH filed for divorce from his wife on his 41st birthday after being caught on camera d.. See more

Chris Hemsworth, globally recognized for his portrayal of Thor in Marvel’s cinematic universe, has shocked fans by filing for divorce on his 41st birthday. This unexpected decision has not only…

Read more

SAD NEWS: Just 30 minutes ago in New York, the family of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg confirmed that he had encountered…read more

Just 30 minutes ago, a heartbreaking announcement came from New York, where Mark Zuckerberg’s family confirmed a development that has left the tech world and his followers in shock. The…

Read more

SHOCK: Star Aishwarya Rai turned down a Hollywood movie with Brad Pitt because she promised “He used to make me d… Read more

Aishwarya Rai was offered a pivotal role in Brad Pitt-starrer Troy but she turned it down because she had made promises in India. Aishwarya Rai was a movie star in…

Read more

SHOCK: “Because he crossed the line.” Alec Baldwin DECLARATES that he will make Elon Musk leave the United States within the next 24 hours, I will share all of Elon’s dark secrets.. see more

Recently, Alec Baldwin, one of Hollywood’s famous movie stars, caused a stir with a strong statement targeting Elon Musk. In an interview, Baldwin announced that he would make Elon Musk…

Read more

LATEST: Abhishek Bachchan REVEALS about his marriage amid divorce rumours with Aishwarya Rai “I saw with my own eyes him … see more

Abhishek Bachchan Breaks Silence on Divorce Rumors with Aishwarya Rai: “I No Longer Want to…” March 1, 2025 Recently, Bollywood’s power couple, Abhishek Bachchan and Aishwarya Rai Bachchan, have been…

Read more

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *