Dabney Coleman, the moustached character actor who specialized in smarmy villains like the chauvinist boss in 9 to 5 and the nasty TV director in Tootsie, has died. He was 92.

Coleman died Thursday at his home in Santa Monica, Calif., his daughter, Quincy Coleman, said in a statement to The Associated Press. She said he “took his last earthly breath peacefully and exquisitely.”

“The great Dabney Coleman literally created, or defined, really — in a uniquely singular way — an archetype as a character actor. He was so good at what he did it’s hard to imagine movies and television of the last 40 years without him,” actor Ben Stiller wrote on X.

For two decades, Coleman laboured in movies and TV shows as a talented but largely unnoticed performer. That changed abruptly in 1976, when he was cast as the incorrigibly corrupt mayor of the hamlet of Fernwood in Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman, a satirical soap opera that was so over the top no network would touch it.

Producer Norman Lear finally managed to syndicate the show, which starred Louise Lasser in the title role. It quickly became a cult favourite. Coleman’s character, Mayor Merle Jeeter, was especially popular, and his masterful, comic deadpan delivery did not go overlooked by film and network executives.

A six-footer with an ample black mustache, Coleman went on to make his mark in numerous popular films, including as a stressed-out computer scientist in War Games, Tom Hanks’s father in You’ve Got Mail and a fire-fighting official in The Towering Inferno

He won a Golden Globe for The Slap Maxwell Story and an Emmy Award for best supporting actor in Peter Levin’s 1987 small screen legal drama Sworn to Silence. Some of his recent credits include Ray Donovan and a recurring role on Boardwalk Empire, for which he won two Screen Actors Guild Awards.

In the groundbreaking 1980 hit 9 to 5, he was the “sexist, egotistical, lying, hypocritical bigot” boss who tormented his unappreciated female underlings — Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin and Dolly Parton — until they turned the tables on him.

Among Coleman’s other films were On Golden PondNorth Dallas FortyCloak and DaggerDragnetMeet the ApplegatesInspector GadgetStuart Little and Moonlight Mile.

A harder time on TV

Coleman’s obnoxious characters didn’t translate quite as well on television, where he starred in a handful of network comedies. Although some became cult favourites, only one lasted longer than two seasons, and some critics questioned whether a series starring a lead character with absolutely no redeeming qualities could attract a mass audience.

A Nov. 14, 1988 file photo shows actor Dabney Coleman.
Coleman appeared on screen for decades, but his early work in movies and television saw him work as a talented but largely unnoticed performer. (Nick Ut/The Associated Press)

Buffalo Bill (1983-1984) was a good example. It starred Coleman as “Buffalo Bill” Bittinger, the smarmy, arrogant, dimwitted daytime talk-show host who, unhappy at being relegated to the small-time market of Buffalo, N.Y., takes it out on everyone around him. Although smartly written and featuring a fine ensemble cast, it lasted only two seasons.

Another was 1987’s The Slap Maxwell Story, in which Coleman was a failed small-town sportswriter trying to save a faltering marriage while wooing a beautiful young reporter on the side.

Other failed attempts to find a mass TV audience included Apple PieDrexell’s Class (in which he played an inside trader) and Madman of the People, another newspaper show in which he clashed this time with his younger boss, who was also his daughter.

He fared better in a co-starring role in The Guardian (2001-2004), which had him playing the father of a crooked lawyer. And he enjoyed the voice role as Principal Prickly on the Disney animated series Recess from 1997-2003.

‘Shy all my life’

Underneath all that bravura was a reserved man. Coleman insisted he was really quite shy.

Dabney Coleman stands on his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles November 6, 2014.
Coleman stands on his star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Los Angeles in November 2014. (Phil McCarten/Reuters)

“I’ve been shy all my life. Maybe it stems from being the last of four children, all of them very handsome, including a brother who was Tyrone Power-handsome. Maybe it’s because my father died when I was four,” he told The Associated Press in 1984. “I was extremely small, just a little guy who was there, the kid who created no trouble. I was attracted to fantasy, and I created games for myself.”

As he aged, he also began to put his mark on pompous authority figures, notably in 1998’s My Date With the President’s Daughter, in which he was not only an egotistical, self-absorbed president of the United States, but also a clueless father to a teenager girl.

Dabney Coleman — his real name — was born in 1932 in Austin, Texas.

After two years at the Virginia Military Academy, two at the University of Texas and two in the Army, he was a 26-year-old law student when he met another Austin native, Zachary Scott, who starred in Mildred Pierce and other films.

“He was the most dynamic person I’ve ever met. He convinced me I should become an actor, and I literally left the next day to study in New York. He didn’t think that was too wise, but I made my decision,” Coleman told the AP in 1984.

Early credits included such TV shows as Ben CaseyDr KildareThe Outer LimitsBonanzaThe Mod Squad and the film The Towering Inferno. He appeared on Broadway in 1961 in A Call on Kuprin. He played Kevin Costner’s father on Yellowstone.

Twice divorced, Coleman is survived by four children, Meghan, Kelly, Randy and Quincy, and grandchildren Hale and Gabe Torrance, Luie Freundl and Kai and Coleman Biancaniello.

“My father crafted his time here on Earth with a curious mind, a generous heart, and a soul on fire with passion, desire and humour that tickled the funny bone of humanity,” Quincy Coleman wrote in his honour.



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