Calgary Herald

Law & Order star had real police background

- FRAZIER MOORE

NEW YORK — Dennis Farina, a onetime Chicago police officer who as a popular character actor played a TV cop on Law & Order during his wide-ranging career, has died.

Publicist Lori De Waal said Farina died Monday morning in a Scottsdale, Ariz., hospital after he suffered a blood clot in his lung. He was 69.

For three decades, Farina was a character actor who displayed remarkable dexterity, charm and toughness, making effective use of his craggy face, husky frame, ivory smile and ample moustache. He could be as dapper as Fred Astaire or as full of threat as Clint Eastwood. His gift has been described as wry, tough-guy panache, and audiences loved him for it.

“Sometimes you can take those dramatic roles and maybe interject a little humour into them, and I think the reverse also works,” Farina said in a 2007 interview with The Associated Press. “One of the funny things in life to me is a guy who takes himself very seriously.”

Farina’s many films include Saving Private Ryan, (1998), Out Of Sight (1998), Midnight Run (1988), Manhunter (1986), and his breakout and perhaps most beloved film, Get Shorty (1995), a comedic romp where he played a Miami mob boss. He recently completed shooting a comedy film, Lucky Stiff.

Among his numerous TV roles was Detective Joe Fontana on Law & Order during the 2004-06 seasons, replacing longtime cast member Jerry Orbach in the ensemble.

Also on TV, Farina was a regular in the star-studded though shortlived 2011-12 HBO horse-track drama Luck.

He starred in the 1980s cult favourite Crime Story, and his stylish private-eye drama Buddy Faro (1998) was warmly received if little-watched. He followed that up with a 2002 sitcom flop, The In-Laws.

Last season he guest-starred on the Fox comedy New Girl.

A veteran of the Chicago theatre, Farina appeared in Joseph Mantegna’s Bleacher Bums and Streamers, directed by Terry Kinney, among other production­s.

Born Feb. 29, 1944, Farina was raised in a working-class neighbourh­ood of Chicago, the seventh child of Italian immigrants.

After three years in the U.S. army, he served with the Chicago Police Department for 18 years, both as a uniformed officer (he was there for the 1968 Chicago riots) and a burglary detective, before he found his way into acting as he neared his 40s.

His first film was the 1981 action drama Thief, starring James Caan and directed by Michael Mann — a future collaborat­or on numerous projects as recently as Luck — whom he had met through a mutual friend.

In Thief he landed a small role as a criminal henchman, and, while not initially planning a career change, found the film world “very interestin­g,” as he told the AP in 2004, and concluded it could be a great sideline. (At the time, he was supplement­ing his police salary by working as a security guard.)

He continued to work as a detective while taking occasional dramatic roles, and even took a leave of absence from the Chicago police to star in Crime Story, before he made the full-time acting plunge.

Farina is survived by three sons, six grandchild­ren and his longtime partner, Marianne Cahill.

 ?? Terry Wowchuck/odeon Films ?? Dennis Farina was a Chicago police officer before turning to acting in his late 30s.
Terry Wowchuck/odeon Films Dennis Farina was a Chicago police officer before turning to acting in his late 30s.

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