The Mercury News

Dean Stockwell, 85: Starred in ‘Quantum Leap’ and ‘Blue Velvet’

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NEW YORK >> Dean Stockwell, a top Hollywood child actor who gained new success in middle age in the sci-fi series “Quantum Leap” and in a string of indelible performanc­es in film, including David Lynch’s “Blue Velvet,” Wim Wenders’ “Paris, Texas” and Jonathan Demme’s “Married to the Mob,” has died. He was 85.

Jay Schwartz, a family spokespers­on, said Stockwell died of natural causes at home Sunday.

Stockwell was Oscarnomin­ated for his comic mafia kingpin in “Married to the Mob” and was four times an Emmy nominee for “Quantum Leap.” But in a career that spanned seven decades, Stockwell was a supreme character actor whose performanc­es — lip-syncing Roy Orbison in a nightmaris­h party scene in “Blue Velvet,” a desperate agent in Robert Altman’s “The Player,” Howard Hughes in Francis Ford Coppola’s “Tucker: The Man and His Dream” — didn’t have to be lengthy to be mesmerizin­g.

Stockwell’s own relationsh­ip with acting, having started on Broadway at age 7, was complicate­d. In a peripateti­c career, he quit show business several times, including at age 16 and again in the 1980s, when he moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico, to sell real estate.

“Dean spent a lifetime yo-yoing back and forth between fame and anonymity,” his family said in a statement. “Because of that, when he had a job, he was grateful. He never took the business for granted. He was a rebel, wildly talented and always a breath of fresh air.”

The dark-haired Stockwell was a Hollywood veteran by the time he reached his teens. In his 20s, he starred on Broadway as a young killer in the play “Compulsion” and in prestigiou­s films such as “Sons and Lovers.” He was awarded best actor at the Cannes Film Festival twice, in 1959 for the bigscreen version of “Compulsion” and in 1962 for Sidney Lumet’s adaptation of Eugene O’Neill’s “Long Day’s Journey Into Night.”

“My way of working is still the same as it was in the beginning — totally intuitive and instinctiv­e,” he told The New York Times in 1987. “But as you live your life, you compile so many millions of experience­s and bits of informatio­n that you become a richer vessel as a person. You draw on more experience.”

 ?? ALAN GRETH — AP ?? Actor Dean Stockwell poses in February 1989 at an unknown location.
ALAN GRETH — AP Actor Dean Stockwell poses in February 1989 at an unknown location.

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