NewStats: 3,263,223 , 8,179,441 topics. Date: Thursday, 05 June 2025 at 06:47 AM 7216i

6z3e3g

Gene Hackman And His Wife, Betsy Arakawa Found Dead At Their Home - Celebrities - Nairaland 2k1y2n

Gene Hackman And His Wife, Betsy Arakawa Found Dead At Their Home (30908 Views)

(4)

(1) Go Down)

naptu2: 9:54am On Feb 27
Gene Hackman and his wife found dead at their home


Hackman and Arakawa pictured at the Golden Globe Awards in 2003

Oscar-winning US actor Gene Hackman and his wife Betsy Arakawa have been found dead at their home in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

In a career that spanned more than six decades, he received two Academy Awards, two Baftas, four Golden Globes and a Screen Actors Guild Award.

A statement from the Santa Fe County Sheriff in New Mexico said: "We can confirm that both Gene Hackman and his wife were found deceased Wednesday afternoon at their residence on Sunset Trail.

"This is an active investigation - however, at this time we do not believe that foul play was a factor."

Hackman won the best actor Oscar for his role as Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle in William Friedkin's 1971 thriller The French Connection, and another for best ing actor for playing Little Bill Daggett in Clint Eastwood's Western film Unforgiven in 1992.

His other Oscar-nominated roles were in 1967 movie Bonnie and Clyde - as Buck Barrow in his breakthrough role - and 1970's I Never Sang for My Father, as well as playing the agent in Mississippi Burning (1988).

Santa Fe County Sheriff Adan Mendoza confirmed the news to local media just after midnight on Wednesday that the couple had died, along with their dog.

The news was later confirmed to the Press Association news agency. Hackman was 95 and his wife 63.

Mr Mendoza said there was no immediate indication of foul play. But he did not provide a cause of death or say when the couple might have died.

"All I can say is that we're in the middle of a preliminary death investigation, waiting on approval of a search warrant."



Much celebrated actor Hackman played more than 100 roles including Lex Luthor in Superman movies in the 1970s and 1980s.

He also starred in the hit movies Runaway Jury and The Conservation, as well as Wes Anderson's The Royal Tenenbaums.

His last big screen appearance came as Monroe Cole in Welcome to Mooseport in 2004.

Born in California in 1930, Hackman had enlisted in the army after lying about his age at 16, serving for four-and-a-half years.

Following his military service, after briefly living in New York he decided to pursue acting.

In order to pursue his chosen career, Hackman ed the Pasadena Playhouse in California, where he befriended a young Dustin Hoffman.

"I was trained to be an actor, not a star. I was trained to play roles, not to deal with fame and agents and lawyers and the press," he once said.

"It really costs me a lot emotionally to watch myself on-screen. I think of myself, and feel like I'm quite young, and then I look at this old man with the baggy chins and the tired eyes and the receding hairline and all that."

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cewkkkvkzn9o?

1 Like

naptu2: 9:54am On Feb 27

6 Likes 1 Share

naptu2: 9:55am On Feb 27

2 Likes

naptu2: 10:14am On Feb 27
Obituary

Gene Hackman: One of Hollywood's greatest 'tough guys'

Gene Hackman, who has died aged 95, was once described as having the face of a truck driver, but became one of Hollywood's most bankable stars.

He won two Oscars - and was nominated for another three - playing violent men, yet was equally at home in comedy.

Having shot to fame in Bonnie and Clyde at the end of the 1960s, he was rarely out of work - in films like The French Connection, Mississippi Burning and Superman.

He retired from acting in 2004 on the advice of his heart doctor, and rarely gave an interview again - opting for a quiet life in New Mexico with his second wife, Betsy.

Eugene Allen Hackman was born in San Bernardino, California, in 1930 and led a peripatetic childhood.

His parents divorced, and he was palmed off on various relatives until settling with his maternal grandmother in Danville, Illinois.

His father left the family when Hackman was still in his teens; his mother eventually burned to death in 1962, after setting fire to her mattress with a cigarette while drunk.

Hackman lied about his age to the Marines at the age of 16, and served nearly five years.

He was stationed in China where he worked as a radio operator, which led to later work as a disc jockey.


He gained his first Oscar nomination alongside Warren Beatty in Bonnie and Clyde

"I have trouble with direction," he once said of his short military career, "because I have trouble with authority. I was not a good Marine."

When Hackman enrolled at the Pasadena Playhouse in California in the 1960s, he and classmate Dustin Hoffman were voted the "least likely to succeed".

Undeterred by this vote of no confidence, both actors decamped to New York where they shared a flat with another aspiring thespian, Robert Duvall.

Hackman managed to pick up a few minor stage roles, supplementing his income by taking on a variety of odd jobs.

He would often relate the story of how he was spotted by a former drill sergeant outside a New York hotel while he was working as a doorman.

Recognising his former charge, the sergeant exclaimed that he knew Hackman would never amount to anything.


He won his first Oscar as a tough drugs cop -"Popeye" Doyle - in The French Connection in 1971

There was also a stint as an overnight cleaner in New York's Chrysler Building, something Hackman later described as the worst job he ever had.

There were parts in light comedies both off and on Broadway, which led first to minor television roles and then to some film work.

His first movie role was in Lilith starring Warren Beatty.

Impressed by his performance, Beatty cast Hackman as his brother, Buck Barrow, in Bonnie and Clyde in 1967.

Hackman received an Oscar nomination for best ing actor and was nominated again for I Never Sang for My Father in 1970.

But then came The French Connection.


The French Connection established Gene Hackman as one of the great screen tough guys

It was the part that made him.

He played the part of the maverick narcotics agent Jimmy "Popeye" Doyle who pursues a French drugs dealer, most notably in a famous sequence on the New York subway.

It brought him an Academy Award for best actor, and he reprised the role in The French Connection II in 1975.

Gene Hackman never looked back.

Whether it was for critically-acclaimed movies such as The Conversation and Night Moves, or popular blockbusters like The Poseidon Adventure, he became a reliable box-office draw.

One of the great screen tough guys, he effortlessly switched to comedy in Young Frankenstein and played the sleazy supervillain Lex Luthor in Superman and Superman II.


Playing the evil villain Lex Luthor alongside Christopher Reeve in Superman IV

Hackman was so upset about the producers' treatment of the director, Richard Donner, that he refused to take a part in the next sequel, although he later appeared in Superman IV: The Quest for Peace.

The 1980s was another successful decade, notably for his appearance in Mississippi Burning, for which he was again nominated for a best actor Academy Award.

It was a powerful performance as an FBI agent, tasked, along with a rookie colleague, with investigating the racist murder of black civil rights workers in the early 1960s.

Director Alan Parker referred to Hackman as " a very intuitive and instinctive actor".


Gene Hackman and Clint Eastwood holding their Oscars for Unforgiven

Another Oscar for best ing actor came in 1991 for Unforgiven - a Clint Eastwood Western - in which he played a sadistic sheriff, Bill Daggett.
The film also won best picture. It came only a year after Hackman required by surgery following a heart attack.

There was a leading role as Edward "Brill" Lyle, the computer genius in the 1998 film, Enemy of the State, where he starred alongside Will Smith in a frightening tale of government surveillance.

Hackman's hard-edged screen persona made him ideal for the intelligent but ruthless characters in film adaptations of John Grisham novels - such as The Firm and Runaway Jury - in which, for the first time, he and former flatmate Dustin Hoffman appeared on screen together.

His versatility, and the luxury of being able able to choose scripts, led in 2001 to another great performance, in the offbeat comedy The Royal Tenenbaums, which drew rave reviews.

But he chose to bow out from acting in the political satire, Welcome to Mooseport in 2004.

Explaining his decision, he told Reuters he didn't want to risk going out on a sour note.

"The business for me is very stressful. The compromises that you have to make in films are just part of the beast," he said, "and it had gotten to a point where I just didn't feel like I wanted to do it any more."

A decade later, he did briefly come out of retirement to narrate two documentaries about the history of the US Marine Corps - but otherwise stuck to his plan.


After retiring from the cinema, Gene Hackman gained a new reputation as an author

After quitting acting, he gained a new reputation as a writer of historical fiction.

He co-wrote four books with Daniel Lenihan, Wake of the Perdido Star (1999), Justice for None (2004), Vermillion (2004) and Escape from Andersonville (2008).

He went on to deliver two solo writing efforts, Payback at Morning Peak (2011) and Pursuit (2013).

He spoke about why he had taken to his new job.
"I like the loneliness of [writing], actually. It's similar in some ways to acting, but it's more private and I feel like I have more control over what I'm trying to say and do," he told Reuters.

"There's always a compromise in acting and in film, you work with so many people and everyone has an opinion (laughs).

"But with the books, it's just Dan and I and our opinions. I don't know that I like it better than acting, it's just different. I find it relaxing and comforting."

Hackman married Faye Maltese in 1956. The couple had three children but divorced in 1986.
Five years later he married Betsy Arakawa, who ran an upmarket furniture store in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Gene Hackman made more than 80 films, and still managed to become both a proficient golfer and respected painter.

He was also a mean performer on the racetrack, driving Formula Ford cars and taking part in the 1983 Daytona Endurance Race.

Throughout his career, he gave few interviews and eschewed the celebrity lifestyle.

"If you look at yourself as a star," he said, "you've already lost something in the portrayal of any human being."

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cjm9ndw9xeeo

3 Likes 1 Share

Negroid001(m): 10:14am On Feb 27
Poisoning maybe.

6 Likes 1 Share

obinna58(m): 10:14am On Feb 27
Damn
KingTom(m): 10:14am On Feb 27
Gene, he was brilliant in THE QUICK AND THE DEAD cool

15 Likes 3 Shares

Saga16: 10:15am On Feb 27
Poseidon Adventure.

Great movie.

2 Likes

Freshfish4: 10:15am On Feb 27
So sad

1 Like

AmazingELixir: 10:15am On Feb 27
shocked shocked shocked

Oops Crimson tide man don kpai ooo...chai i enjoyed that movie those days.

RIP to them from Nairaland community.

11 Likes

Focusmind: 10:15am On Feb 27
Including their dog o shocked shocked shocked I just watched the new on BBC

Some of these celebrities goes through a lot, emotionally and suffers from serious mental illness

What must have caused their deaths?

12 Likes

Jnrprince1(m): 10:16am On Feb 27
Strange
Therock5555(m): 10:16am On Feb 27
Damn what a sad end.

RIP to them all....
AngelicBeing: 10:20am On Feb 27
Might be SUICIDE shocked

2 Likes 1 Share

Maxymilliano(m): 10:20am On Feb 27
Gene was a fantastic actor, RIP

10 Likes 2 Shares

bigdammyj: 10:20am On Feb 27
Noted.
Rip to the dead.
24kmagik: 10:21am On Feb 27
RIP to him.

I don't know him tho
Rexymania(m): 10:22am On Feb 27
What could have been the cause?
Saga16: 10:23am On Feb 27
KingTom:
Gene, he was brilliant in THE QUICK AND THE DEAD cool

Love that movie too.

How come there was a cowboy wearing sunglasses though?

2 Likes

Nairanation2: 10:23am On Feb 27
Too bad. I think this man featured in the season film Shooter, where Jack Swagger is the main character.
DemonSlayer: 10:24am On Feb 27
No foul play suspected but they're all dead including their dog? How much of a coincidence is that? Abi na generator fume kpai them? Foul play suspected, o jare!

20 Likes 3 Shares

KingTom(m): 10:26am On Feb 27
Saga16:


Love that movie too.

How come there was a cowboy wearing sunglasses though?
Na normal goof, like the one in Django Unchained grin

3 Likes 1 Share

Creamypie(m): 10:26am On Feb 27
Eyaaaaaa. Na one of my favorite actors, along with roger Moore and Anthony Hopkins. Indomie kids pls stay off this topic

4 Likes 1 Share

nedekid: 10:27am On Feb 27
Na wah, abi have they started using I my neighbour generator in the US weh we go talk say fumes kill them?
May their souls rest in peace, to reach 90 (in his case) no be beans.

3 Likes

Ishilove: 10:27am On Feb 27
WHAAAAAT?!!
Efuaye(m): 10:29am On Feb 27
A foul play somewhere
armadeo(m): 10:31am On Feb 27
Another legend is gone.

I cannot even begin to list the movies he was in that I loved.

Rip gene

3 Likes

Iceiscold: 10:32am On Feb 27
Sad one..rip to them
strangest(m): 10:36am On Feb 27
Rest in peace
tommy589(m): 10:37am On Feb 27
shocked RIP

Clint Eastwood,Dustin Hoffman,Robert Duvall great actors all


"Recognising his former charge, the sergeant exclaimed that he knew Hackman would never amount to anything"
I wonder why people say that? Well,you just have to surprise them

5 Likes 2 Shares

calabaman(m): 10:38am On Feb 27
This one weak me.

May he and his wife rip.

With his demise, what's the future for Hollywood movies.
Memphis357(m): 10:38am On Feb 27
The man!
The myth!
The Legend!
RIP, Gene🕊

1 Like

(1) Reply)

Gifty: Don't Die Of Jealousy Let The Contestants Shine - Gifty Shakes Bbn Tables

(Go Up)

Sections: How To . 49
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or s on Nairaland.