Gene Hackman and wife found dead

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Legendary Hollywood star Gene Hackman and his wife Betsy Arakawa have been found dead in their Santa Fe home.
The couple, who had been married since 1991, were found alongside their dog. Local media has reported that no foul play is suspected.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...a-Fe-home.html

https://www.lbc.co.uk/showbiz/gene-hackman-and-wife-betsy-arakawa-found-dead-in-santa-fe-home/

The couple's dog was also found dead inside the property. And yet they’re saying ‘no foul play’. Seems odd.



Sheriff: Gene Hackman, wife found dead in Santa Fe home; no foul play suspected



Legendary actor, two-time Oscar winner and author Gene Hackman and his wife, classical pianist Betsy Arakawa, were found dead Wednesday afternoon in their home in the Santa Fe Summit community northeast of the city. Santa Fe County Sheriff Adan Mendoza confirmed just after midnight Thursday the couple had died, along with their dog. Mendoza said in an interview Wednesday evening there was no immediate indication of foul play. He did not provide a cause of death or say when the couple might have died.

Hackman, 95, had lived in Santa Fe since the 1980s and married Arakawa, 63, in 1991.

Sheriff's deputies arrived at the couple's home on Old Sunset Trail, in a gated community off Hyde Park Road just north of Ten Thousands Waves, on Wednesday afternoon to investigate the deaths of two elderly people and a dog. It was unclear whether the deputies were responding to a report of the deaths or if they were making a welfare check at the home.

The deputies discovered the bodies of a man in his 90s and a woman in her 60s, Mendoza initially reported. "All I can say is that we're in the middle of a preliminary death investigation, waiting on approval of a search warrant," the sheriff said Wednesday evening, before his agency had positively identified the pair. "I want to assure the community and neighborhood that there's no immediate danger to anyone," he said.

Born Jan. 30, 1930, in San Bernardino, Calif., Hackman won numerous accolades, including two Academy Awards, over the course of his long career. Among his many famous roles were Detective Jimmy “Popeye” Doyle in 1971’s The French Connection, for which he won the Oscar for Best Actor, and Sheriff “Little Bill” Daggett in the 1992 Clint Eastwood film Unforgiven, for which he won the Best Supporting Actor award. In other well-known roles, Hackman played Clyde’s brother Buck Barrow in 1967’s Bonnie and Clyde, an FBI agent investigating the murder of civil rights activists in Mississippi Burning in 1988, and Lex Luthor in several Superman movies in the 1970s and 1980s.

He was married to his first wife, Faye Maltese, from 1956 to 1986, and the couple had three children — Christopher, Elizabeth and Leslie, according to People. He moved to Santa Fe in the 1980s and was often seen around town in his first few decades in the city. He served as a board member of the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum in the 1990s, and gave remarks when the museum opened its doors in 1997, according to a report in The New Mexican. “In the 10 years I’ve lived here, I’ve been taken with the excitement and indomitable spirit of this place," he said at the time.

The Tesuque restaurant El Nido was reportedly a favorite spot for Hackman, who frequently appeared in The New Mexican's popular "El Mitote" column on celebrity sightings and gossip, which ran for decades before it ended in 2018. He rarely went out publicly in his last years, though his few public appearances at times made headlines. When he attended a show at the Lensic in 2018, the British newspaper The Independent wrote about it. Hackman caused a stir in downtown Santa Fe in 2012, when police said the film star stuck a homeless man in self-defense. The New Mexican reported Hackman told police the man had threatened him and his wife and had called his wife a vulgar name. The two men had known each other, according to a report of the incident. Hackman told officers he had provided clothes, money and rides to the man for several years. But when the man approached the couple on Marcy Street — not far from The New Mexican's office — Hackman refused to give him money and told him, instead, to get a job, the report said. No one was charged in the incident, which appeared in news reports nationwide.

The New York Post published a story about Hackman doing yard work, pumping gas and getting a chicken sandwich at a local Wendy’s in 2023. Last year, the paper ran another story about a sighting of Hackman and his wife, this time eating at a seafood restaurant in Albuquerque. Hackman turned to writing in his later years. He and fellow Santa Fean Daniel Lenihan wrote several books together, the first in 1999. The pair published Escape From Andersonville: A Novel of the Civil War in 2008. Hackman then wrote two novels on his own, Payback at Morning Peak, published in 2011, and Pursuit in 2013.


Nathan Brown and Cynthia Miller of The New Mexican contributed to this report.

https://www.santafenewmexican.com/ne...232a2b5213.htm
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So weird because I was just thinking of him last night and wondering how he was doing, only to hear this tonight. Man, this is sad. I held this man in high regard as an actor and even though he was retired and we hadn't seen any work from him in a long time, I always thought about his movies and how much I liked the man. Godspeed, Gene, and thanks for all the great performances.
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1. Bonnie and Clyde
2. Mississippi Burning
3. Night Moves
4. The Conversation
5. Superman
6. No Way Out
7. Crimson Tide
8. Enemy of the State
9. Unforgiven
10. The French Connection



*Husband, wife, even the DOG found dead inside the house*

Cops: No foul play suspected

Yeah....okay
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*Husband, wife, even the DOG found dead inside the house*

Cops: No foul play suspected

Yeah....okay
Right?! I did a triple take. Initially thought it was a newsroom oopsie, but no, this statement is syndicated everywhere. CO, probably.



I still don’t get this at all. How the hell does a couple die along with their dog and there’s no foul play?
It could be a gas leak or carbon monoxide etc.

I've read everything from that to "he was a leader of a religious cult" today. Pointless supposition.



It could be a gas leak or carbon monoxide etc.

I've read everything from that to "he was a leader of a religious cult" today. Pointless supposition.
Well, yes, I did think of a gas leak immediately. But it does seem preposterous, you’d think they’d have gas inspections sorted.

Quite apart from that, if it’s as simple as that, isn’t that quite easy to determine and say this much, rather than ‘inquiries ongoing’?



No foul play, but perhaps a foul smell?

Sad though, he was a fine actor, i'll always think of his role as a racist in Mississippi Burning, but also in The Birdcage, his speech about purple mountain majesty made my mom laugh hard, for that i'm ever thankful for Gene's impeccable delivery.
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More sad news...


This does seem odd. I guess carbon monoxide makes sense, but even my broke ass has detectors in my house.


RIP.



More sad news...


This does seem odd. I guess carbon monoxide makes sense, but even my broke ass has detectors in my house.


RIP.
That’s why it seemed so bizarre to me. Also carbon monoxide poisoning is quite common, why wouldn’t they just announce it if that’s the cause of death?



New York Times obituary...


By Robert Berkvist
Feb. 27, 2025


Gene Hackman, who never fit the mold of a Hollywood movie star, but who became one all the same, playing seemingly ordinary characters with deceptive subtlety, intensity, and often charm in some of the most noted films of the 1970s and ’80s, has died, the authorities in New Mexico said on Thursday. He was 95.

Mr. Hackman and his wife were found dead on Wednesday afternoon at a home in Santa Fe., New Mexico, where they had been living, according to a statement from the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Department. The cause of death was unclear and under investigation. Sheriff’s deputies found the bodies of Mr. Hackman; his wife, Betsy Arakawa, 64; and a dog, according to the statement, which said that foul play was not suspected.



Mr. Hackman was nominated for five Academy Awards and won two during a 40-year career in which he appeared in films seen and remembered by millions, among them Bonnie and Clyde, The French Connection, The Poseidon Adventure, Mississippi Burning, Unforgiven, Superman, Hoosiers, and The Royal Tenenbaums. The familiar characterization of Mr. Hackman was that he was Hollywood’s perfect Everyman. But perhaps that was too easy. His characters — convict, sheriff, Klansman, steelworker, spy, minister, war hero, grieving widower, submarine commander, basketball coach, president — defied pigeonholing, as did his shaded portrayals of them. Still, he did not deny that he had a Regular-Joe image, nor did he mind it. He once joked that he looked like “your everyday mine worker.” And he did seem to have been born middle-aged: slightly balding, with strong but unremarkable features neither plain nor handsome, a tall man (6-foot-2) more likely to melt into a crowd than stand out in one.

It was Mr. Hackman’s gift to be able to peel back the layers from characters who carried the weight of middle age. “Because they’ve been around long enough to experience failure and loss, but not long enough to take it easy, Hackman could play them with a distinctive mix of shadow and light,” Jeremy McCarter wrote in an appraisal of Mr. Hackman’s career in Newsweek in 2010, six years after the release of what turned out to be his last film, the comedy Welcome to Mooseport, and two years after he confirmed that he did not plan to make any more movies. “While some actors congratulate themselves for venturing into the moral gray zone,” Mr. McCarter continued, “Hackman has called it home for so long that we’ve ceased to notice. In his performances, as in life, the good guys aren’t always nice guys, and the villains have charm.” If the critics had one word for Mr. Hackman as a performer, it was “believable.” He seemed to live his roles, they said, not play them.

“There’s no identifiable quality that makes Mr. Hackman stand out,” Janet Maslin wrote in The New York Times in 1988. “He simply makes himself outstandingly vital and real.” He avoided self-analysis when he talked about acting. “I don’t like to look real deep at what I do with my characters,” he once said. “It is that strange fear that if you look at something too closely, it goes away.”



Mr. Hackman was forever associated with his breakout role, that of the crude, relentless narcotics cop Popeye Doyle — a grim-faced bloodhound in a porkpie hat — in the hit 1971 film The French Connection. That performance brought him his first Academy Award, as Best Actor. But that was only one of countless memorable film portraits. He received an Oscar nomination for his work in Alan Parker’s Mississippi Burning (1988), in which he played an F.B.I. agent investigating the disappearance of three civil rights workers — a “scratchy, rumpled, down-home-talking redneck, who himself has murder in his heart,” as Vincent Canby wrote in The Times. In Unforgiven (1992), as a vicious small-town sheriff who crosses six-guns with a bounty hunter played by Clint Eastwood, he was a chilling study in sadistic brutality. That performance brought him his second Oscar, as Best Supporting Actor.

Early Accolades

Early in his career Mr. Hackman worked on television shows like “Route 66” and “Naked City", in improvisational theater, and in Broadway comedies, including Muriel Resnik’s “Any Wednesday,” with Sandy Dennis, and Jean Kerr’s “Poor Richard,” with Alan Bates and Joanna Pettet. His performance in a bit part in a 1964 Warren Beatty movie, Lilith, made a lasting impression on Mr. Beatty, who remembered him when he was producing Bonnie and Clyde and looking for someone to play Buck Barrow, the explosive brother of the gangster Clyde Barrow (played by Mr. Beatty). Mr. Hackman’s performance in that film, directed by Arthur Penn and released in 1967, brought him his first Oscar nomination.



By the time the director William Friedkin cast him in The French Connection, Mr. Hackman had more than a dozen films under his belt and a second supporting-actor Oscar nomination, for I Never Sang for My Father (1970), in which he played a widower coping with a demanding parent (played by Melvyn Douglas). Not all his roles explored life’s dark side. His knack for comedy, honed on the stage, resurfaced in Mel Brooks’s Young Frankenstein (1974), in which he was cast as a blind hermit who unknowingly plays host to the monster, and served him well in later films like The Birdcage (1996) and The Royal Tenenbaums (2001).

By the mid-1970s Mr. Hackman was making movies at such a frantic pace that he became known as the hardest-working actor in Hollywood. In 1972 he appeared in three feature films, most notably The Poseidon Adventure, in which he played a minister trying to survive with other frantic passengers aboard a capsized ocean liner. (The other two were Prime Cut and Cisco Pike). He repeated that trifecta in 1974 with Young Frankenstein, the western Zandy’s Bride, and The Conversation, Francis Ford Coppola’s taut, understated drama about a surveillance expert who becomes involved in trying to prevent a murder.

His work in The Conversation was one of a string of critically acclaimed performances in the 1970s; among the others were his brawling ex-con in Scarecrow (1973) — which he considered the best performance of his career — and his troubled private eye in Night Moves (1975), in which he was reunited with Arthur Penn. But perhaps inevitably, given how many there were, his performances were often routine.



Mr. Hackman was making lots of money, but he was also wearing himself out. His return appearance as Popeye Doyle in French Connection II in 1975 was one of four Hackman films that were released that year. By the end of the decade, he decided he’d had enough for a while. After playing Lex Luthor, nemesis of the Man of Steel, in Superman: The Movie (1978) — and simultaneously filming his scenes for Superman II, released two years later — Mr. Hackman briefly left Hollywood. He did not make another film until All Night Long, a comedy co-starring Barbra Streisand, in 1981.

His streak of well-received performances soon resumed: as a high school basketball coach in search of redemption in Hoosiers (1986) and a government official who accidentally murders his mistress in No Way Out (1987); as a district attorney trying to protect a witness from two hit men in Narrow Margin (1990); and, in The Birdcage, Mike Nichols' remake of the French comedy La Cage aux Folles, as a conservative, pompous politician whose daughter’s fiancé turns out to have two gay men, one of them a drag performer, as parents.

No Slowing Down

Even the heart surgery he underwent in 1990 did not slow his pace. In 2001, a year after turning 70, Mr. Hackman was seen in five films: the comedy The Heartbreakers, as a tobacco tycoon; The Heist, David Mamet’s story of an elaborately planned robbery, as a master thief contemplating retirement; Behind Enemy Lines, as a naval chief trying to rescue a pilot shot down over Bosnia; The Mexican, a comedy adventure starring Brad Pitt and Julia Roberts, as an imprisoned mob boss; and Wes Anderson’s quirky The Royal Tenenbaums, as the absentee father of three prodigiously talented children. That same year the critic David Edelstein, noting that unlike most actors of comparable stature, Mr. Hackman occupied “a middle ground between character acting and movie stardom,” suggested one key to his success. “Even at their jauntiest,” Mr. Edelstein wrote in The Times, “Mr. Hackman’s performances have volcanic undercurrents. It might be that the secret of his uniqueness is that his comfort zone is such a scary and volatile place.”

Eugene Allen Hackman was born in San Bernardino, California, on Jan. 30, 1930, and grew up in Danville, Illinois. His father, also named Eugene, was a pressman for the local newspaper. His mother, Anna Lyda (Gray) Hackman, was a waitress. When young Gene was 13, his father abandoned the family, driving away while his son was out playing in the street. As his father passed by, Mr. Hackman recalled years later, he gave him a wave of the hand. “I hadn’t realized how much one small gesture can mean,” he once said. “Maybe that’s why I became an actor.” Lying about his age, he enlisted in the Marine Corps in 1946 and served in China and then in Hawaii and Japan, at one point working as a disc jockey for his unit’s radio station. After his discharge he studied journalism at the University of Illinois for six months and then went to New York to learn about television production.

He worked at local stations around the country before deciding to study acting, first in New York and then at the Pasadena Playhouse in California, where Dustin Hoffman was a fellow student. They struck up a lasting friendship, though they did not appear in a film together until 2003, when they were both in Runaway Jury, a courtroom drama based on a John Grisham novel. Back in New York, Mr. Hackman met and married Faye Maltese, a bank secretary, and began the classic actor’s struggle to survive. “I drove a truck, jerked sodas, sold shoes,” he told an interviewer.



A Broadway Hit

Eventually he found theater work, first in summer stock and then Off Broadway. In “Any Wednesday” — his third Broadway play, but the first to last more than a few days — he played a young man from Ohio who goes to New York and falls in love with a tycoon’s mistress. The critics applauded, the play was a hit, and Mr. Hackman never had to sell another pair of shoes. Mr. Hackman’s first marriage ended in divorce in 1986, after several trial separations. In 1991 he married Ms. Arakawa, a classical pianist, and they settled in Santa Fe. He is survived by his children from his first marriage.

Mr. Hackman returned to the stage in 1992, opposite Glenn Close and Richard Dreyfuss in Mike Nichols’s production of “Death and the Maiden,” Ariel Dorfman’s play about a Latin American woman (Ms. Close) who succeeds in trapping the man (Mr. Hackman) she believes had raped and tortured her as a political prisoner years earlier. It was his first appearance on Broadway in twenty-five years; it was also his last. In his later years Mr. Hackman devoted much of his time to painting and sculpture at his adobe home in Santa Fe. He also became a published author. He collaborated with his friend Daniel Lenihan, an underwater archaeologist, on three historical novels, and later wrote Payback at Morning Peak (2011), a western, and Pursuit (2013), a thriller.



He never formally retired from acting, but he told an interviewer in 2008 that he had given it up because he did not want to “keep pressing” and risk “going out on a real sour note.” Three years later, when an interviewer for GQ magazine told him, “You’ve got to do one more movie,” he said, “If I could do it in my own house, maybe, without them disturbing anything and just one or two people.” In that same interview, Mr. Hackman was asked to sum up his life in a single phrase. He replied: “‘He tried.’ I think that’d be fairly accurate.”

Robert Berkvist, a former New York Times arts editor, died in 2023. Yan Zhuang and Alex Marshall contributed reporting.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/27/o...kman-dead.html



I mainline Windex and horse tranquilizer
I still don’t get this at all. How the hell does a couple die along with their dog and there’s no foul play?

It's been suggested that it could be carbon monoxide poisoning.


Same thing happened to Weird Al Yankovic's parents.
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