The Denver Post

Michael Culver, Star Wars actor and on-screen victim of Darth Vader, dies at 85

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Michael Culver, a British actor best known for one of the memorable death scenes in the Star Wars franchise, died Feb.

27. He was 85.

Culver’s death was confirmed by Alliance Agents, which posted a statement to social media Tuesday, and his agent, Thomas Bowington. The agency did not give a cause of death, although Bowington said Culver had cancer for several years.

He had an acting career on screen and stage that spanned more than 50 years and included roles in “The Return of Sherlock Holmes” on TV and the 1984 film “A Passage to India.”

But his most lasting impact on popular culture came in

1980, with his brief role as Captain Needa in the second Star Wars film, “The Empire Strikes Back.” Needa, after losing track of Han Solo’s Millennium Falcon, apologizes to Darth Vader, who promptly chokes him to death telepathic­ally. “Apology accepted, Captain Needa,” Vader says, walking around the captain’s body and motioning for others to take him away.

Culver also appeared in two James Bond films with actor Sean Connery, “From Russia With Love” and “Thunderbal­l.”

Michael John Edward Culver was born June 16, 1938, in London to Daphne Rye, a theater casting director, and Ronald Culver, an actor, according to Bowington.

Culver performed in several Shakespear­e plays and worked regularly with British director Anthony Page, his agent said.

Later in his life, Culver mostly gave up acting to focus on politics, Bowington said.

He still regularly visited Star Wars fan events, notably one in Chicago in 2019, when “he was lost for words” when he saw nearly 200 people waiting in line to see him, his agency said in its statement.

“When I did Star Wars, it just seemed to be, ‘Oh, they’re doing a movie about starships.’ So I did it. I just thought, ‘Well, I hope it’s successful,’” he said in a 2023 interview on the “Making Tracks” podcast, adding: “You don’t expect 40 years later to be still signing autographs for it.”

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