Irwin was a self-taught cartoonist, published in The New Yorker, Playboy and Los Angeles.[2] He won a Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award, four Drama-Logue Awards, Gilmore Brown Award for Career Achievement, Pacific Pioneer Broadcasters' Diamond Circle Award, and Distinguished Alumnus Award from Angelo State University.[2]
(December 2, 1914 – December 29, 2010)Background and personal life |
Family
He lived in North Hollywood with his wife, actress and journalist Fran MacLachlan Erwin (who predeceased her husband). The couple had two daughters and two sons.Death
Bill Irwin died on December 29, 2010 in Studio City, Los Angeles, near the production lot where Seinfeld was filmed.[2]Career
Film
In the late 1950s, Erwin was in such pictures as "A Streetcar Named Desire", Man From Del Rio, The Night Runner, and The Cry Baby Killer. He played Jack Nicholson's father in "Cry Baby Killer", Nicholson's first starring role in 1958. The long out-of-print film was released on DVD on November 22, 2006. He would later co-star alongside Christopher Reeve and Jane Seymour in the 1980 romantic fantasy Somewhere in Time – as Arthur Biehl, the Grand Hotel's venerable bellman – and attend annual reunions of cast, crew, and fans of the movie Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island, Michigan.Erwin has appeared in a number of films directed by John Hughes, with cameos in Planes, Trains and Automobiles, She's Having a Baby, Home Alone, and Dennis the Menace. Hughes often paired him with Billie Bird as his wife.
Television
His television credits were far more numerous in the 1950s, having appeared in such television shows as I Love Lucy, Crusader, Trackdown, Colgate Theatre, "Perry Mason" and The Rifleman. In the 1960s, Erwin appeared in television shows such as: The Andy Griffith Show, Mister Ed, Maverick, The Twilight Zone, 87th Precinct, The Fugitive, and Mannix.In the 1970s, 80s and 90s he appeared in Barnaby Jones, Cannon, and Gunsmoke. ER, Highway to Heaven, Voyagers, Seinfeld, The Dukes of Hazzard, Married... with Children, Growing Pains, Full House, The Golden Girls, Moonlighting, My Name is Earl, and Star Trek: The Next Generation. In Star Trek: The Next Generation, Erwin played Dr. Dalen Quaice, a friend and mentor of Dr. Beverly Crusher. He was the first character to disappear in the episode "Remember Me".
In the Seinfeld episode ("The Old Man"), for which Erwin received an Emmy nomination for outstanding guest actor, he played Sid Fields, who participates in the Foster-A-Grandpa Program, which pairs him with Jerry Seinfeld. Erwin's crochety, aggressive, foul-mouthed character ensures that the relationship is doomed from the beginning. Erwin later reunited with Michael Richards when he guest-starred on the short-lived The Michael Richards Show. In the 2000s, Erwin appeared on Monk, The West Wing, King of Queens, Everwood and My Name Is Earl.
Other media
Erwin began his theatrical career as ventriloquist Edgar Bergen's stage manager for Bergen's 1941 tour of the country. Erwin dryly recalled, "I was in charge of the dummies."To see more of who died in 2010 click here
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