It’s with great sadness I have to report that Magnum Force
actor Kip Niven has died at the age of 73; it was confirmed by the Jackson
County medical examiner's office in Kansas City, Missouri.
No cause of death was released for the actor, who in later
years helped to shape the theatre scene in his native Kansas City.
Robert Urich, with Kip Niven (right) |
Born Clifford Niven, he was raised in the Kansas City suburb
of Prairie Village, Kansas, and graduated from Shawnee Mission East High School
in 1963.
After time at Baylor University, he shifted to the
University of Kansas, where he entered the theatre program and became a
mainstay in many of its productions. These led to roles in TV shows of the
early 1970s, including "The Sixth Sense" and "Emergency!"
But it was his role as rogue motorcycle cop Astrachan in the
1973 Clint Eastwood film "Magnum Force" made Hollywood take notice. Niven
appeared in several disaster films of the era, including "Earthquake"
(1974), "Airport 1975" (1974) and "The Hindenburg" (1975).
The actor continued to find success on television well into
the 1980s, including on shows such as "The Waltons," where he played
the Rev. Tom Marshall.
On the sitcom "Alice," he portrayed Steve Marsh, a
country singer who falls in love with the title character played by Linda Lavin
and helps her to fulfil her dream to pursue singing. In real life Niven and
Lavin were married, and they had a contentious divorce that wound through the
New York courts until it was finalized in 1992. Niven marred Lavin in 1982, a
year after his actress-wife Susan (whom he had wed in 1968) was killed in an
accident.
He later married Beth Reiff and returned with her to Kansas
City in the 1990s. Reiff died in 2012. According
to The Kansas City Star, Niven was a founder of the city's Equity Actors'
Readers' Theatre and played Phog Allen in "Jayhawkers," a 2014 film
directed by University of Kansas film professor and Oscar-winning screenwriter
Kevin Willmott.
His long-time friend and collaborator Doug Weaver told the
paper that Niven was passionate about acting and helped anyone who wanted to
get into theatre. "The most amazing thing about Kip -- he knew every actor
in Kansas City," Weaver said. "He was so full of life and joy."
Niven was a fan favourite for his role as the diabolical
Richard Sullivan in the 1980 horror film "New Year's Evil." His last
completed role listed on Internet Movie Database was as Uncle Fred in the short
film "Devil's Food Cake."
Rip Sir.
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