Chattanooga Times Free Press

Dustin Diamond, ‘Saved by the Bell’ actor often embroiled in scandal, dies

- BY NARDINE SAAD

Dustin Diamond, the former child star who most notably played curly-haired geek Samuel “Screech” Powers on NBC’s wholesome 1990s sitcom “Saved by the Bell” and then became infamous for a number of post-show scandals, has died. He was 44.

Diamond, who revealed on Jan. 14 that he had Stage 4 cancer, died in a Florida hospital Monday morning as arrangemen­ts were being made to move him to hospice care, his talent agent, Roger Paul, told The Times. Diamond had small-cell carcinoma that metastasiz­ed in his lungs after originatin­g elsewhere in his body.

As Screech, Diamond embodied the ultimate yesman sidekick who executed preppy Zack Morris’ most harebraine­d ideas. Each week, the oddball character would improve or subvert Zack’s schemes with his scientific know-how, all while pining over the friend group’s wealthy fashionist­a, Lisa Turtle, played by Lark Voorhies. (He never did win her heart but came close a few times.)

The San Jose native was a fifth-grader when he was cast and debuted on the series when it was still airing as “Good Morning, Miss Bliss,” a precursor to the highschool comedy that aired on the Disney Channel after NBC passed on the series. It starred Hayley Mills as the titular Miss Bliss and “Saved by the Bell’s” Mark-Paul Gosselaar, Dennis Haskins and Voorhies. Nineties’ TV stars Jaleel White of “Family Matters” and Brian Austin Green of “Beverly Hills, 90210” also appeared in some of the show’s 14 episodes.

After sagging ratings, NBC relaunched the Indiana-set show in 1989 as the multicamer­a teen sitcom “Saved by the Bell,” shifting the focus from Mills’ middle-school teacher to a group of six archetypal students at California’s fictional Bayside High. Mario Lopez’s sensitive jock A.C. Slater, Elizabeth Berkley’s bright feminist Jessie Spano and Tiffani-Amber Thiessen’s girl-next-door cheerleade­r Kelly Kapowski joined Diamond’s Screech, Gosselaar’s Zack and Voorhies’ Lisa.

The comedy aired Saturday mornings on NBC through 1993. It was poorly received by critics but grew a devoted millennial fan base and ultimately spawned the prime-time sequels “Saved by the Bell: The College Years” and “Saved by the Bell: The New Class” (along with two TV movies and various stunt reunions, to the delight of its cult following). Diamond continued for a year with “The College Years” before moving on to “The New Class,” which debuted in 1993 and ran through 2000.

In 2020, NBC again revived the cultural touchstone as a postmodern­ist, self-aware series for its fledgling streaming service Peacock. The principal actors returned in substantia­l roles — except for Diamond. (Screech was briefly mentioned in the series, and Voorhies made only a cameo).

After the show’s original run and sequels went off the air, Diamond quickly shook off his character’s squeakycle­an image and began making headlines for more lurid escapades, including a 2006 sex tape titled “Screeched” and a Wisconsin bar fight for which he was jailed.

“The hardest thing about being a child star is giving up your childhood,” the actor said in 2013 on “Oprah: Where Are They Now?” “You don’t get a childhood, really. You’re a profession­al and you’ve got to know your lines and rehearse and practice. It was making sure that you were the funniest and the best that you can be because if you weren’t funny, you could be replaced.”

Born on Jan. 7, 1977, Diamond was 23 when the series ended and said he had been working every week for 10 years.

“I felt lost. As I mature, I realize, wow, I was kind of going through my rebellious teens in my 20s,” he told Oprah Winfrey.

He also said the sex tape he made when he was 29 was one of the things he was “most embarrasse­d about.” He said he agreed to do it only when he learned that hotel heiress Paris Hilton reportedly made $14 million from her illicit video. He noted that it was only his face in the video and not his body. He claimed he used a stunt person for it.

“Looking back now in my 30s, I realize that was really dumb,” he said, explaining that although he made some money from the tape, it “wasn’t worth what the fallout was.”

“People to this day look down on me. There’s a lot of people [who think] ‘how disgusting of you’ — and I didn’t really do it,” he said.

Also in 2006, the actor embarked on a viral campaign to save his Port Washington, Wisconsin, home from foreclosur­e. To supplement his meager income as a standup comic, Diamond tried selling some 30,000 autographe­d T-shirts that read “I paid $15.00 to save Screeech’s house.” (The additional “e” in the character’s name was to work around copyright laws).

Another fallout ensued when he released the 2009 tell-all book “Behind the Bell,” recounting his experience­s working on the beloved show. It was another disappoint­ment for the actor. The firsttime author used a ghostwrite­r, whom he believed used his throwaway stories for more scandalous narratives, including allegation­s of a cast orgy that he later had to dispel.

The series was also dragged through the mud in a 2014 Lifetime movie, “The Unauthoriz­ed Saved by the Bell Story,” whose teleplay was based in part on Diamond’s memoir and didn’t involve any other original cast members. It received a similarly negative reception on social media and a public lashing from Gosselaar, who continued to find TV success, among others.

Diamond was arrested in 2014 and faced felony and misdemeano­r charges for stabbing a man. Though he pleaded not guilty and testified that he never intended to stab anyone in the Christmas Day brawl, he was convicted for the two misdemeano­rs and sentenced to four months in jail in 2015. Diamond said he was trying to scare bar patrons in Port Washington after his girlfriend was punched in the face.

The stand-up comic made a later career of playing himself or his “Bell” persona in numerous projects. Some of his eclectic titles included the instructio­nal 2001 documentar­y “Dustin Diamond Teaches Chess,” a cameo in the 98 Degrees music video for “I Do [Cherish You]” and several TV movies. He also appeared as himself in the contentiou­s 2007-08 season of “Celebrity Fit Club” and a 2013 run of “Celebrity Big Brother.”

 ?? PAUL DRINKWATER/NBCU PHOTO BANK VIA AP ?? Actor Dustin Diamond poses as Samuel Powers, better known as “Screech” from the 1990s sitcom“Saved by the Bell.”
PAUL DRINKWATER/NBCU PHOTO BANK VIA AP Actor Dustin Diamond poses as Samuel Powers, better known as “Screech” from the 1990s sitcom“Saved by the Bell.”

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