HomeBusinessOscar-winning actor Louis Gossett Jr. dies aged 87 Achi-News

Oscar-winning actor Louis Gossett Jr. dies aged 87 Achi-News

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Louis Gossett Jr., the first black man to win a supporting actor Oscar and an Emmy winner for his role in the groundbreaking 1970s TV series Roots, has died. He was 87 years old.

Gossett’s nephew told The Associated Press that the actor died Thursday night in Santa Monica, California. No cause of death was disclosed.

Gossett always thought of his early career as a reverse Cinderella story, with success finding him at an early age and driving him forward, towards his Academy Award for Officer and Gentleman.

He earned his first acting credit in his high school’s Brooklyn production of You Can’t Take It with You while sidelined from the basketball team with an injury.

“I was hooked – and so was my audience,” he wrote in his 2010 memoir An Actor and a Gentleman.

His English teacher encouraged him to go to Manhattan to try Take a Giant Step. He got the part and made his Broadway debut in 1953 at the age of 16.

“I knew too little to be nervous,” Gossett wrote.

“Looking back, I should have been scared to death as I walked onto that stage, but I wasn’t.”

Gossett moved to New York where he became friendly with James Dean and studied acting with Marilyn Monroe, Martin Landau and Steve McQueen during a stint at the Actors Studio taught by Frank Silvera.

He became a Broadway star, appearing alongside people like Sammy Davis Jr and Sidney Poitier (who was the first black man to win the best actor Oscar in 1964).

But it wasn’t long until Hollywood called.

Gossett made a series of guest appearances on television shows in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but broke through on the small screen as Fiddler in the groundbreaking 1977 miniseries Roots, which depicted the horrors of slavery on television.

His performance as a menacing Marine drill instructor in An Officer and a Gentleman, opposite Richard Gere and Debra Winger, won him an Oscar and a Golden Globe for best supporting actor in 1983.

“More than anything, it was a huge confirmation of my position as a black actor,” he wrote in his memoir.

But he said winning an Oscar didn’t change the fact that all his roles were supporting ones.

Gossett struggled with alcohol and cocaine addiction for years after his Oscar win. He went to rehab, where he was diagnosed with toxic mold syndrome, which he attributed to his house in Malibu.

Just last year, Gossett played a wayward patriarch in the 2023 remake of The Color Purple.

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