Jack-Warden-Obituary

Jack Warden

Obituary

LOS ANGELES (AP) _ Jack Warden, an Emmy-winning and Academy Award-nominated actor who played gruff cops, coaches and soldiers in a career that spanned five decades, has died. He was 85.

Warden, who lived in Manhattan, died Wednesday at a hospital in New York, Sidney Pazoff, his longtime business manager, said here Friday.

''Everything gave out. Old age,'' Pazoff said. ''He really had turned downhill in the past month; heart and then kidney and then all kinds of stuff.''

Warden was nominated twice for best supporting actor Oscars in two Warren Beatty movies. He was nominated for his role as a businessman in 1975's ''Shampoo'' and the good-hearted football trainer Max in 1978's ''Heaven Can Wait.''

He won a supporting actor Emmy Award for his role as Chicago Bears coach George Halas in the 1971 TV movie ''Brian's Song'' and was twice nominated in the 1980s for best leading actor in a comedy for his show ''Crazy Like a Fox.''

Warden, with his wild white hair, weathered face and gravelly voice, was in demand for character parts for decades.

In real life, the former boxer, deckhand and paratrooper was anything but a tough guy.

''Very gentle. Very dapper,'' Pazoff said.

''Most of them (actors) are pretty true to the characters that they play. He was one who was not,'' Pazoff said.

Warden was born John H. Lebzelter in 1920 in Newark, New Jersey. He was still in high school during the Depression when he tried his hand at professional boxing under his mother's maiden name of Costello.

He had 13 welterweight bouts in the Louisville area before joining the Navy, where he was sent to China and patrolled the Yangtze River.

He also had jobs as a nightclub bouncer, a lifeguard and a deck hand on an East River tugboat.

In 1941, he joined the Merchant Marine. He served in the engine room as his ship made convoy runs to Europe.

''The constant bombings were nerve-racking below decks,'' he recalled for a 1976 studio biography.

He quit in 1942 and enlisted in the Army. He was a paratrooper with the 101st Airborne Division but shortly before D-Day he broke his leg during a nighttime practice jump in Britain.

''They sent me back to the States,'' he recalled in a 1988 Associated Press interview. ''I was in a hospital for nearly a year.''

A fellow soldier who had been an actor gave him a play to read and he was hooked. He recovered enough to take part in the Battle of the Bulge and, after the war, went to New York to pursue an acting career.

He attended acting classes and did Tennessee Williams plays in repertory companies and moved on to appear in live TV shows such as the famed ''Studio One.''

During the 1950s his career flourished. In addition to TV work, he appeared on Broadway in shows such as Clifford Odets' ''Golden Boy'' and Arthur Miller's ''A View From the Bridge.''

He had small roles in 1953's Oscar-winning ''From Here to Eternity'' and the submarine thriller ''Run Silent, Run Deep'' but his breakthrough role was as Juror No. 7, a salesman who wants a quick decision in a murder case, in 1957's ''Twelve Angry Men.''

Over the next decades he had a number of recurring or starring TV roles. He was a major in ''The Wackiest Ship in the Army''; the coach on ''Mr. Peepers''; a coach again on the small-screen version of ''The Bad News Bears,''; detectives in ''Asphalt Jungle,'' ''N.Y.P.D.'' and ''Jigsaw John''; and a private investigator in ''Crazy Like a Fox.''

His numerous big-screen roles included a news editor in 1976's ''All the President's Men,'' Paul Newman's law partner in 1982's ''The Verdict' and the president in the 1979 Peter Sellers movie ''Being There.''

His later roles were in Woody Allen's 1994 ''Bullets Over Broadway''; Beatty's 1998 political satire ''Bulworth'' and the 2000 football movie ''The Replacements.''

Pazoff said Warden is survived by his longtime girlfriend, Marucha Hinds; estranged wife, Vanda; a son, Christopher; and two grandchildren.

At Warden's request, no funeral services were planned, Pazoff said.

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I met Mr warden in the Bronx, the day my father died...he comforted my mother that day. Very kind
I'm watching Donnavans Reef, he was great there too...God rest his soul....
He told me about the actors in NYC came to the driving range in the Bronx. To practice their game...
I've got shampoo, in which he played,too..
He seemed to have a lot on his mind,that day...I'm older now and I love the suttily of his work.loke Spencer Tracy.....
Take...

Jack Warden is an all time favorite of mine. I truly wish he was still here. I watch any film he is in. He was truly gifted.

I love watching him on movies he is great. ❤

Just saw you tonight in Heaven Can Wait on PBS. A stellar cast, and you were the touchstone, making everyone look better. So glad you didn't stick to the Merchant Marines but found your destiny--to quote Mr. Howard.

It was a pleasure to meet your acquaintance we met at the hardware store where I worked my name is David I work at straight hardware corner of West 43rd Street and 9th avenue across the street from where you live I sat and see that you are on a wheelchair when we met we had great laughs enjoy your company it was a pleasure knowing you and an honor rest in peace Jack your friend David

So sad to hear of your death, Jack.You knew Bob Gold,my father-in-law had passed before you.It was so nice to sit with you and your son, Christopher that August day talking about...what else...my love of movies.You were just going to make And Justice for All with Al.I think it was one of your best!One of the sweetest things you did was ask AL to send me a note.And he did!I loved hearing from you too after.You played these rough around the edges kind of guys, yet you were so tender and...

I was just quoting you from your movie "Presidio", where sitting on a rooftop with Sean Connery, you reminded him that "There's not a whole lot of PERFECT going around", when discussing his daughter's investigation. I used to remind many a senior curator at the Smithsonian's Museum of Natural History, of your quip. I also, much to my supervisor's chagrin that a PhD after your name didn't make them smart, just EDUCATED, lol. Reading your full bio, it's easy to see why I always loved everything...

As a little girl my parents would take me to the Margo Jones Theatre in the Round in Dallas where Jack Warden and so many others received their acting career under TWU graduate Margo. I saw Jack first in Learned Ladies. The actors's costumes would brush against one as the audience was part of the theatre. I watched his careervover the years. Thank you, Jack you were a great actor. Joan Mulcahy Thompson