Last week I was very sadly
informed that actor Anthony James had died at the age of 77. I felt that Mike
Barnes of the Hollywood Reporter wrote a very fine and apt obituary:
He often played bad guys in a
career bookended by those two appearances in Oscar-winning best pictures. Anthony
James, the lanky character actor who played sleazy, menacing types in such
films as In the Heat of the Night, Unforgiven and High Plains Drifter, has
died. He was 77.
James died Tuesday of cancer,
according to an obituary announcement posted by a funeral home in Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
Remarkably, James' career was
bookended by appearances in two best picture Oscar winners: He made his
big-screen debut as Ralph Henshaw, a racist manning a diner counter, in Norman
Jewison's In the Heat of the Night (1967), then wrapped things up as Skinny
Dubois, a hostile owner of a bordello, in Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven (1992).
In between, the 6-foot-6 James
appeared in Vanishing Point (1971), Hearts of the West (1975), as a spooky
chauffeur in Burnt Offerings (1976), Blue Thunder (1983) and The Naked Gun 2
1/2: The Smell of Fear (1991), in which he parodied his evil image in an
over-the-top performance.
An only child, James Anthony was
born to Greek immigrants on July 22, 1942, in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. His
father, George, built and owned a restaurant called The Mayflower but died when
the boy was just 8.
When he was 18, he and his
mother, Marika, took a train to Union Station in Los Angeles after selling all
of the family possessions. He cleaned bathrooms to pay for acting lessons, then
made his onscreen debut with a one-line role on a 1966 episode of NBC's T.H.E.
Cat, starring Robert Loggia.
(He took the stage name Anthony
James when he discovered there was another actor known as Jimmy Anthony.)
James appeared seven times on Gunsmoke
— four as Elbert Moses — and also appeared on The Big Valley, Hawaii Five-O,
Mod Squad, Police Story, Starsky and Hutch, Buck Rogers in the 25th Century,
The A-Team, Simon & Simon, Star Trek: The Next Generation and Married …
With Children.
After retiring from acting in the
mid-'90s, James, who never married, moved to the Boston area to focus on a
career as an artist, and his abstract paintings were shown across the U.S. (He
gifted one to Eastwood.) A book of his artwork and poems, Language of the Heart,
was published in 1994.
In 2014, James published his
memoirs, Acting My Face, which he dedicated to his mom. "I never
considered myself a celebrity, just a sometime recognizable face," he
said.
Donations in his memory can be
made to St. Jude Children's Research Hospital or to the American Society for
the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.
RIP Sir.
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