The Post

Much-acclaimed Broadway actor better known for his tough-guy roles in movies

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Brian Dennehy, who has died aged 81, was a Tony-winning stage actor who also played barrel-chested villains, gun-toting lawmen and the occasional charming father figure on screen. Standing 6ft 3in tall, Dennehy had a booming voice and an often intimidati­ng screen presence, playing an overzealou­s sheriff opposite Sylvester Stallone’s Rambo character in First Blood (1982), a corrupt Western lawman in the Kevin Kline film Silverado (1985) and serial killer John Wayne Gacy in the TV miniseries To Catch a Killer (1992).

He also starred as an endearing alien leader in Cocoon

(1985), a role he modelled after the children’s show host Mr

Rogers, and was featured in comedies such as Semi-Tough (1977) with Burt Reynolds, 10 (1979) with Dudley Moore, and Tommy Boy (1995), as Chris Farley’s exasperate­d father.

Dennehy was celebrated for his work as a character actor in Hollywood and on television, where he earned six Emmy nomination­s. But he received even greater acclaim for his performanc­es on the stage, starring in revivals of classic plays including Eugene O’Neill’s The Iceman Cometh, Anton Chekhov’s The Cherry Orchard and Bertolt Brecht’s Life of Galileo.

‘‘If it doesn’t scare me,’’ he once said of theatrical roles, ‘‘I’m not interested.’’

Dennehy won two Tony Awards for best actor. His first came for playing the central role of Willy Loman in a 1999, 50thannive­rsary revival of Arthur Miller’s tragedy Death of a Salesman, which New York Times theatre critic Ben Brantley called the performanc­e of his career.

‘‘What this actor goes for is close to an everyman quality, with a grand emotional expansiven­ess that matches his monumental physique,’’ Brantley wrote. ‘‘Yet these emotions ring so unerringly true that Mr Dennehy seems to kidnap you by force, trapping you inside Willy’s psyche.’’

‘‘I will always be haunted,’’ he added, ‘‘by the image of Mr Dennehy’s infantile fragility when he shields his face with his hands, palms outward, before an angry, confrontat­ional [Kevin] Anderson’’, who played Willy’s son Biff.

Dennehy received an Emmy nomination for a 2000 television adaptation of the production and won his second Tony Award for playing the domineerin­g patriarch James Tyrone in a 2003 revival of O’Neill’s melodrama Long Day’s Journey Into Night.

Both plays were directed by Dennehy’s longtime artistic collaborat­or Robert Falls and landed on Broadway after playing at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago, where Dennehy starred in production­s that included a 2010 double bill of O’Neill’s Hughie and Samuel Beckett’s one-act Krapp’s Last Tape.

On Broadway, he also appeared in a 2009 revival of O’Neill’s Desire Under the Elms.

Brian Manion Dennehy was born in Bridgeport, Connecticu­t, and grew up in Brooklyn, Queens and Long Island, New York. His father was an Associated Press journalist, his mother a nurse, and by the age of 14, Dennehy was acting onstage, appearing as the lead in a high school production of Macbeth.

He played football and studied history at Columbia University, dropping out to serve in the Marine Corps before returning to receive his degree.

‘‘From 1965 to 1974 I served the best possible apprentice­ship for an actor,’’ he told

in 1989. ‘‘I learned firsthand how a truck driver lives, what a bartender does, how a salesman thinks. I had to make a life inside those jobs, not just pretend.’’

Dennehy studied drama as a graduate student at Yale and, by the late 70s, he was frequently appearing on television programmes, including Kojak, M.A.S.H., Lou Grant and Dallas.

His screen credits also included the movies Gorky Park (1983), F/X (1986) and director Peter Greenaway’s The Belly of an Architect (1987), as a sickly and cerebral architect. He also appeared in the Scott Turow adaptation Presumed Innocent (1990), Romeo + Juliet (1996) and Terrence Malick’s existentia­l drama Knight of Cups (2015).

Dennehy received his last Emmy nomination for the TV movie Our Fathers (2005), playing a Catholic priest who opposes the church coverup of sexual abuse and is later forced from the pulpit. He voiced the rat Django in the animated Pixar movie Ratatouill­e (2007) and was recently featured on the NBC crime series The Blacklist.

His first marriage, to Judith Scheff, ended in divorce, and in 1988 he married Jennifer Arnott, a costume designer. In addition to his wife, survivors include three daughters from his first marriage, Elizabeth, Kathleen and Deirdre Dennehy; two children from his second, Sarah and Cormac Dennehy; and seven grandchild­ren.

Dennehy, who traced his ancestry back to Ireland, acknowledg­ed a personal connection with the brooding, hard-drinking characters he often played on the stage and screen. He was known for holding raucous St Patrick’s Day parties, once renting a 40ft mobile home and hiring a driver to take his friends from bar to bar. He boasted to The Times: ‘‘At my parties, the sheriff’s department comes three or four times a night.’’

He eventually stopped drinking, turning his focus to acting. It had replaced the Catholic faith of his childhood, he said, with another religion: art.

‘‘The most important function that an actor has is – when he does his work right – he holds up a mirror to the audience,’’ Dennehy once told USA Today, ‘‘and says, ‘This is you in some way. When you walk out of this place tonight, or when you turn the television set off, you will have seen a piece of yourself, and you will know something about yourself that you didn’t know before.’ ’’ –

‘‘The most important function that an actor has is – when he does his work right – he holds up a mirror to the audience, and says, ‘This is you in some way.’ ’’

 ?? AP ?? Brian Dennehy with his 2006 best actor trophy at London’s Olivier Awards, for his role as Willy Loman in a revival of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman.
AP Brian Dennehy with his 2006 best actor trophy at London’s Olivier Awards, for his role as Willy Loman in a revival of Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman.

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