Tag: Law & Order

  • Fred Dalton Thompson, U. S. Senator, actor and more, has died

    Fred Dalton Thompson, U. S. Senator, actor and more, has died

    Fred Dalton Thompson as “Admiral Painter” in ‘The Hunt for Red October’

    Freddie “Fred” Dalton Thompson was an attorney, a United States Senator from Tennessee, a lobbyist, a candidate for the U. S. Presidency in 2008, an actor who worked in movies and television, and a radio talk-show host, died today. Reports are that he died at the age of 73 from lymphoma.

    He was born in Alabama but grew up in Lawrenceburg, TN, a small town known as the “Crossroads of Dixie.”  Following his graduation from law school in 1967 he became an assistant U. S. attorney and worked as the minority counsel to the Senate Watergate Committee during its investigation of the Watergate Scandal.  Some credit Thompson as the author of a question asked by Senator Howard Baker during the investigation, “What did the president know and when did he know it.”

    Fred Dalton Thompson and U. S. Senator Howard Baker during the 1973 Watergate Hearings
    Fred Dalton Thompson and U. S. Senator Howard Baker during the 1973 Watergate Hearings

    His acting career began when he played himself in the 1985 movie Marie and from there went on to 1987’s No Way Out where or portrayed the director of the CIA.   He followed that up with roles in The Hunt for Red October, Die Hard II, In the Line of Fire, and many others.  Then after playing an FBI agent in 1994’s Baby’s Day Out, Fred Thompson became the junior U. S. Senator from Tennessee, being elected to replace Al Gore.  He won reelection in 1996.

    Aside from taking one voiceover movie part and a guest-appearance on TV’s Sex and the City, he did not resume acting until his March 2002 announcement that he would not seek reelection to his U. S. Senate seat.  Months later it was announced that he would be joining the cast of NBC’s Law & Order as “Arthur Branch” the Manhattan District Attorney.  It was a role he would continue in until 2007 when he left to begin his campaign for the presidential nomination of the Republican party in 2008.  A campaign that did not last long as he withdrew from the race in January of 2008.

    Former U. S. Senator Fred Dalton Thompson during his campaign for the 2008 Presidential Nomination
    Former U. S. Senator Fred Dalton Thompson during his campaign for the 2008 Presidential Nomination

    Fred Dalton Thompson was the only sitting U. S. Senator to ever portray someone other than themselves on television as his first appearance on Law & Order occurred before the expiration of his term in the U. S. Senate.  He remains the only actor appearing on the show and its various spin-offs who was a prosecutor in real-life.  Married twice, he is survived by his wife Jeri and five of his six children.

  • Dennis Farina, star of ‘Law & Order’ and ‘Get Shorty’ has died

    Dennis Farina, star of ‘Law & Order’ and ‘Get Shorty’ has died

    Dennis Farina and Vinnie Jones in 'Snatch'
    Dennis Farina and Vinnie Jones in ‘Snatch’

    Actor Dennis Farina has died in a hospital in Scottsdale, Arizona.  He was 69 and his publicist says the cause of death was a pulmonary embolism.  Born and raised in Chicago, he spent three years in the U.S. Army before joining the Chicago Police Department.  He spent 18 years as a tough Chicago cop, becoming a detective.

    In the early 1980s he was hired by director Michael Mann as a police consultant and that led to a small role in the 1981 film Thief.  In 1985 he portrayed a gruff Chicago cop in the Chuck Norris film Code of Silence (probably the best acting Norris ever did).

    Dennis Farina was best known for his work on television, in Mann’s critically acclaimed series Crime Story and for two seasons on the hit show Law & Order.  Cast to replace Jerry Orbach, Farina himself left the show after two seasons to pursue other projects.  He was thought of as an excellent replacement for Orbach, who had left the show due to the illness that ultimately took his life in 2004.

    Throughout his career he played most cops or mobsters, appearing in such memorable films as Get Shorty, Manhunter, Snatch, and the unmemorable Bruce Willis film Striking Distance.  Farina, who didn’t start acting until he was 37 years old also worked in comedy films like Little Big League and Eddie.

    He was a self-deprecating man, who said he was such a poor shot when he was a cop that other officers called him “the Great Wounder.”  Born on February 29th, he’d only seen his actual birthday 15 times during his all too short lifetime.

    Farina was married and divorced and had three sons from that marriage.  Funeral arrangements are pending.