Townsville Bulletin

Cheers to Emmy winner

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JAY Thomas, a radio talk show host and actor with recurring roles on the sitcoms Murphy Brown and Cheers, has died at 69.

He was “one of the funniest and kindest men I have had the honour to call both client and friend for 25 years plus”, publicist Tom Estey said. He did not provide further details.

Thomas was fighting cancer, the New York Daily News reported. Thomas’ best- known roles were as Eddie LeBec, the formerhock­ey player husband of barmaid Carla on Cheers, and tabloid talk- show host Jerry Gold on Murphy Brown, for which he won two Emmys.

Diane English, creator of Murphy Brown, said in a Twitter post that she was heartbroke­n to hear of his death and called him “gifted”.

“I would have loved to write another role for him. RIP Jay,” she tweeted.

Thomas, who in recent years hosted a SiriusXM Radio talk show, was a reliably worthy guest. His annual Christmas time appearance on Late Show with David Letterman became a tradition that included a contest to knock a meatball off a Christmas tree erected onstage.

The custom began one night in 1998 when New York Jets quarterbac­k Vinny Testaverde was a guest. He and Letterman picked up footballs and began tossing them at the oddly decorated tree, aiming for the meatball.

Impatientl­y watching their failures from the wings was Thomas, a former quarterbac­k at tiny Central Piedmont Community College in Charlotte, North Carolina.

He ran on stage, picked up a football and, in one throw, accomplish­ed what the NFL quarterbac­k couldn’t in several.

Thomas was invited back annually for the duration of Letterman’s Late Show run to try to repeat his feat.

With each appearance he also retold a tale of his time as a radio DJ in the South when he and a friend gave a ride to Clayton Moore, star of TV’s Lone Ranger. Letterman hailed it as the “best story I’ve ever heard”.

Thomas called his annual Late Show ritual “the craziest thing I have ever been a part of” in an interview a few years ago with The Associated Press.

Born John Thomas Terrell in Kermit, Texas, he began his radio career as a sports announcer for high school football and college basketball while attending schools including Gulf Coast College and Jacksonvil­le University to earn bachelor’s and master’s degrees, according to his online biography.

Would you like an obituary written about your loved one? Contact Chris Silvini on 4722 4427 for considerat­ion.

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 ?? DUAL ROLES: Actors Candice Bergen and Jay Thomas in a 1990 episode. Picture: GETTY IMAGES ??
DUAL ROLES: Actors Candice Bergen and Jay Thomas in a 1990 episode. Picture: GETTY IMAGES

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