John Mahoney Dies: The Emmy-Nominated ‘Frasier’ Star Was 77
Actor John Mahoney died Sunday at age 77, EW
confirms.
Born in Blackpool, England, in 1940, Mahoney became best
known for his role as Martin Crane in NBC’s Frasier,
though he didn’t kick-start his acting career until later in life. As a child,
Mahoney — who was one of eight children from an Irish-Catholic family —
witnessed the struggles of war firsthand as it quickly tore apart his parents’
marriage.
The British native attended St. Joseph’s College in Blackpool
but was determined to immigrate to the United States. At 19, he moved to
America with the help of his older sister, Vera, a war bride living in
Illinois. As Mahoney acclimated himself with life Stateside, he began
studying at Quincy University in Illinois. Shortly after, he spent three years
in the United States Army and received his citizenship in 1959.
“It was so bleak and dark in England — those gray and
foggy postwar years,” he previously told the Chicago
Tribune. “[The United States], it was so sunny. The people
smiled.”
After graduating from Quincy with a Bachelor’s degree, he
began working on his Master’s degree while teaching English at Western Illinois
University and working as a hospital orderly. Shortly after, Mahoney made the
move to Chicago and began editing a medical journal. However, according to
the Tribune, Mahoney wasn’t
completed satisfied with his life. He spent most of his time “at home, smoking
and drinking a few beers.”
“There was this deep-seated frustration,” he said. “I
knew that the only place I had ever been really happy was on stage.”
Ready to take on showbiz, Mahoney quit his job and
started taking acting classes and soon got his first role in David Mamet’s Water Engine in 1977. Four years after
pursuing acting, John Malkovich encouraged him to join Chicago’s legendary
Steppenwolf Theatre.
“The theater is my brothers, my sisters, my father, my
mother, my wife,” he explained. “It is everything to me.”
In 1986, Mahoney won Broadway’s Tony Award for Best
Featured Actor in a Play for his performance in John Guare’s The House of Blue Leaves.
Before finding success in television, Mahoney made his
film debut in Tin Men and Moonstruck. He went on play memorable roles
in Reality Bites, Say Anything, andAmerican
President, among others.
In 1993, the actor accepted the role of Martin Crane in
NBC’s sitcom Frasier. Throughout his
run with the show, Mahoney received two Emmy nominations and two Golden Globe
nominations for this role. He remained a regular until Frasier‘s end in 2004. More recently, he had
a recurring role in Hot in Cleveland.
Mahoney also had a prolific career as a voice actor,
featuring in several animated films including Antz, Atlantis: The Lost Empire, and The Iron Giant.
Eventually, Mahoney took his skill back to the stage
starring in the Broadway revival of the play Prelude
to a Kiss, Better Late and The Outgoing Tide at the Northlight
Theatre in Illinois.
Throughout his life, Mahoney traveled to and from Los
Angles and New York for various work projects but remained loyal to his home in
Oak Park, Illinois.
“It is quiet here,” he said. “I get bored out of my mind
in L.A. It’s such an industry town. Here, I have old friends who aren’t in the
business. I can walk to all sorts of good places where the waiters and
waitresses don’t want me to read their screenplays.”
Mahoney was never married and did not have any children.
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