The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Murphy Brown,’ ‘Cheers’ actor dies from cancer

- By Neil Genzlinger

Jay Thomas, an actor and radio personalit­y whose work on the television series “Murphy Brown” won him two Emmy Awards in the early 1990s, died Thursday at his home in Santa Barbara, California. He was 69.

The cause was cancer, his agent, Don Buchwald, said.

Thomas was a disc jockey in 1979 when he was cast in a recurring role on “Mork & Mindy,” the ABC sitcom about a space alien played by Robin Williams. Thomas played Remo Da Vinci, coowner of adeli, and appeared in dozens of episodes during the run of the show, which ended in 1982.

After that, the work came fairly regularly, often in the form of smaller TV roles but also the occasional movie appearance, most notably in “Mr. Holland’s Opus” in 1995.

Between “Mork & Mindy” and “Murphy Brown” his most prominent role was a recurring spot on “Cheers” in the 1980s as Eddie LeBec, an ice hockey player who was married to Carla Tortelli (Rhea Perlman), a waitress at the Boston bar of the show’s title.

Thomas was one of the main characters in “Love & War,” a CBS sitcom that ran for three seasons beginning in 1992. His other television credits included the ABC ensemble series “Married People” in the early 1990s and the recent Showtime series “Ray Donovan.”

Thomas’ good looks and ability to play a wise acre were something of a calling card, and his secondary roles could brighten even a weak show or movie. When he and Joan Cusack played best friends to the central couple in the 1997 movie “A Smile Like Yours,” Janet Maslin wrote in her review in The New York Times, “Ms. Cusack, Mr. Thomas and a brief bit about budget airlines are notably funnier than the rest of the film.”

His quick tongue also served him well on the talkshow circuit. He was especially ubiquitous on the “Late Show With David Letter man ,” where he appeared every Christmas season and always told the same story about meeting Clayton Moore, the actor who played the Lone Ranger on TV, a tale that also involved marijuana and a broken headlight. (Thomas, an athlete in his younger days, would also engage in a challenge that involved throwing footballs at a Christmas tree.)

He also pursued a radio career, even as he developed his acting side. Most recently he had a show on Sirius XM satellite radio.

Thomas found amusement in the way people confused him with his television characters.

“I always seem to play the role of a Jewish person,” he said in an interview with The Times in 2000.“On‘ Love and War’ I played Jack Stein, a leftwing Jewish man. On ‘Murphy Brown’ I was Jerry Gold, a right-wing Jewish man. And I won an Emmy for that part. The trouble is, I’m not Jewish. But everyone I met in L.A. thought I was a Jewish man from Brooklyn.”

“I’m from New Orleans,” he added. “My father was a WASP and my mother was Italian.”

Thomas was born Jon Thomas Terrell in Kermit, Texas, on July 12, 1948, and raised in New Orleans. During college — he attended several universiti­es — he started dabbling in sportscast­ing and also did stand-up comedy; he eventually found himself on the radio in New York. He later became well known for his work on Power 106 in Los Angeles.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY MARK VON HOLDEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Jay Thomas.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY MARK VON HOLDEN/GETTY IMAGES Jay Thomas.

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