Renowned character actor Rip Torn, born Elmore Rual Torn Jr, has died aged 88, having enjoyed an on-stage and screen career spanning seven decades. No cause of death has been specified, with the actor’s publicist Rick Miramontez noting that the star passed away on Tuesday afternoon at his home with his wife, Amy Wright, and daughters by his side.
His major achievements include an Emmy for playing Artie, Sanders' irascible producer in Garry Shandling’s production, as well as his sole Oscar nomination for the 1983 drama Cross Creek.
Will Smith, Torn’s co-star in Men in Black and its first sequel, paid his tribute by posting a joint picture on Instagram:
Fantasy author Neil Gaiman also weighed in, sharing that the actor had served as an inspiration for the Mr Wednesday character in his novel American Gods.
Alec Baldwin, who worked with Torn on the television comedy 30 Rock, in his turn, remarked that the character actor was " deeply committed, phenomenal” and “a wonderful madman”.
Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane also, like many more netizens, underscored Torn’s iconic role of Artie in the Larry Sanders Show, as well as his part as Bob Diamond in the 1991 comedy Defending Your Life.
His other films included King of Kings, The Cincinnati Kid, and The Man Who Fell to Earth, in which he starred alongside David Bowie, before being picked to appear as Zed in the first two Men in Black films, along with playing Patches O'Houlihan in Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story.
He also hit headlines more than once over his colourful clashes in everyday life that saw him frequently labelled as a trouble-maker and hell raiser. For instance, in the 1970 film Maidstone, he attacked his pal Norman Mailer with a hammer while the cameras were rolling, Decades later, in 2010, he was detained and then released on bail after drunkenly breaking into a bank in Connecticut while carrying a loaded gun.