Los Angeles Times

‘Frasier’ actor dies at age 77

JOHN MAHONEY

- By Steve Marble steve.marble@latimes.com

John Mahoney played the cranky, lovable dad on TV comedy.

John Mahoney, the English actor who became a familiar presence on American television as Kelsey Grammer’s crankyyet-sensible father on “Frasier,” has died. He was 77.

Mahoney died Sunday after being hospitaliz­ed in Chicago, where he lived. His death was confirmed by the Steppenwol­f Theatre Company, where he’d been an ensemble member since 1979.

Though Mahoney was best known for his role as Martin Crane — the ex-cop who regularly deflates the fully expanded egos of his two sons — his career was expansive and he tackled complex characters in both film and television.

He appeared in “Eight Men Out,” “Barton Fink,” “Tin Man” and “Moonstruck” and was a regular performer at the Steppenwol­f, the acclaimed Chicago theater company.

Mahoney was twice nominated for an Emmy for his performanc­e on “Frasier” and won a Tony Award for “The House of Blue Leaves.” Mahoney’s recent roles included guest appearance­s on “Hot in Cleveland” and a 2015 episode of “Foyle’s War.”

But it was his role as Martin Crane, seated in his worse-for-wear recliner in the midst of Grammer’s otherwise elegant Seattle apartment, for which he was best remembered.

Though he was prolific and his credits numerous, Mahoney said he became accustomed to people rememberin­g his face but not his name.

“I’ve got a sturdy ego, and it doesn’t bother me,” he told The Times in 1996. “As long as writers, directors and the people who can employ me know who I am, I’m fine.”

Born in Blackpool, England, Mahoney came to the U.S. when he was young and landed a job as the editor of a medical magazine, until the work tested his patience. “What’s this, I’m going to write about hemorrhoid­s and cataracts the rest of my life?”

But his career as an actor didn’t begin to bloom until he was in his early 40s.

“By the time I started my career, most people had given up and started selling insurance,” he told the Chicago Tribune in 2004. “I didn’t have so much competitio­n.”

So he took drama classes, landed roles at the Steppenwol­f and worked with emerging actors such as John Malkovich, Gary Sinise and Laurie Metcalf.

As his television and film career blossomed, Mahoney shuttled between L.A. and Chicago and bounced freely between television, cinema and the stage.

“You’re supposed to say how wonderful the stage is and how you only do film and TV for the money, but that sounds a bit whorish to me,” he said in 2009.

“If it’s a great script, I don’t care what the medium is.”

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? ‘I’VE GOT A STURDY EGO’ Though his credits were numerous, John Mahoney, shown in 2009, said he became accustomed to people rememberin­g his face but not his name.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ‘I’VE GOT A STURDY EGO’ Though his credits were numerous, John Mahoney, shown in 2009, said he became accustomed to people rememberin­g his face but not his name.

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