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Being an actor
isn’t all Hollywood glitz and glam. In fact, sometimes it can be downright
dangerous. Take these 10 Hollywood stars, for example. They all have one morbid
thing in common: they died while on the set of the show or movie they were
filming. Though there are plenty of other famous actors, like Heath Ledger, who died before
finishing a project, not all of them died while on set. Some of these deaths
were the result of natural causes, while others met a more gruesome end. Here’s
a look at 10 actors whose lives ended before they finished filming their
projects.
1. Jon-Erik Hexum
An
unintentional gunshot wound to the head on the set of the CBS adventure series Cover
Up killed Hexum in 1984, writes Access Atlanta. He played Mac Harper, the Green Beret-turned-model
in the TV show that delved into international mystery and fashion photography.
According to Entertainment Weekly, Hexum had been napping on October
12, 1984, during delays in filming. When he learned there would be more delays,
he jokingly picked up a .44 Magnum pistol loaded with blanks, said ”Can you
believe this crap?” and pulled the trigger. The blast’s impact fractured his
skull, which drove a bone fragment the size of a quarter into his brain causing
massive bleeding. He was rushed to the hospital where surgery was performed,
however, he remained comatose and was then pronounced brain dead on October 18,
writes Entertainment Weekly.
Cover Up, a show about a fashion photographer and veteran special forces soldier
who went on missions around the world, continued production with a new actor,
but never made it past the first season.
2. Vic Morrow
During the
filming of Twilight Zone: The Movie, Morrow was killed on set in July
1982, along with two child actors, Myca Dinh Le and Renee Chen, says How Stuff Works. The Twilight Zone script called for the use of
both a helicopter and pyrotechnics, a deadly combination in this case. During a
scene in which Morrow was being attacked by American Soldiers in Vietnam, the
pyrotechnics exploded, severing the helicopter’s tail, which caused it to
crash, decapitating Morrow and killing the two child actors as well, per Ranker.
Later, it came
out that the children who died were going to be paid illegally under the table.
Allegedly, the director was trying to avoid California’s laws against kids
working at night, as well as working around the potentially dangerous
combination of a helicopter and pyrotechnics, per How Stuff Works. In fact, director John Landis and four others were
later charged with two counts of involuntary manslaughter due to the illegal
hiring of the children. According to Ranker, the jury decided Landis wasn’t expecting the scene
to be dangerous and found the defendants not guilty. Twilight Zone: The
Movie continued on, and the movie was released in June 1983, performing
poorly at the box office.
3. John Ritter
He collapsed
while on the set of 8 Simple Rules for Dating my Teenage Daughter on
September 11, 2003. Ritter had become ill while working on the ABS series and
ended up collapsing on set. He was rushed to the hospital where he underwent
surgery for a tear in his aorta, a rare medical condition that can hit without
warning, writes Fox News. Ritter died that evening, per Fox News. The show was retitled 8 Simple Rules and continued
for another season with David Spade and James Garner as replacements, writes Access Atlanta. Ritter was well-known for his many works in
television and on film, particularly for his role as Jack Tripper in Three’s
Company, according to Madame Noire.
4. Tyrone Power
While filming Solomon
and Sheba, Tyrone Power suffered a massive heart attack on set during a
fencing scene. He died on the way to the hospital on March 15, 1958, according
to Ranker. Power first rose to popularity in 1936 with Lloyds
of London, according to About. Solomon and Sheba was a series about King
David’s younger son, Solomon, who he names his heir ahead of his older son,
Prince Adonijah, just before his death. During Solomon’s reign over Israel, the
Queen of Sheba arrives in Jerusalem. Solomon falls in love with her, but she is
in cahoots with the Pharaoh of Egypt; their goal is to divide the 12 tribes of
Israel, according to IMDb. Eventually, Sheba falls in love with Solomon and
chooses to side with him against the Pharaoh.
5. Redd Foxx
While filming
on the set of The Royal Family (co-starring Della Reese), Foxx died of a
massive heart attack in 1991. In an ironic twist, he had become famous for
grabbing his chest and calling out to his dead
television wife, Elizabeth, while he pretended to have a heart attack on the
‘70s show Sanford and Son, per Madame Noire. Foxx was 68 years old at the time of his death.
6. Brandon Lee
Lee, the son of
martial arts legend Bruce Lee, was killed on March 31, 1993 in a
stunt accident on the set of The Crow. “Lee’s character was supposed to
get shot in a scene, but the handgun used contained a fragment of a real
bullet,” writes Ranker. During the filming of a scene, Lee was walking
through a doorway carrying a grocery bag as another actor fired blanks at him
from 15 feet away, per The Los Angeles Times. At that moment, Lee activated a
toggle switch underneath the grocery bag and set off the small charge, called a
squib, which is a device commonly used on movie sets to simulate gunfire
effects. Lee was hit in the abdomen by a projectile, and he died later that day
at the age of 28.
Director Alex
Proyas used a double and some special effects in order to complete the movie,
according to The Hollywood Reporter. The Crow tells the story of
a rock musician, Eric Draven, who is granted life and power by a mysterious
crow. Draven uses his abilities to hunt and kill the men that murdered him and
his fiancée.
7. Martha Mansfield
While filming The
Warrens of Virginia, the silent film star was sitting in a car taking a
break in between takes. In what can only be described as a freak accident, a passerby lit a
cigarette, accidentally flicking the match into the automobile. The match landed
on Martha Mansfield’s costume, which was a giant and highly flammable Civil
War-era dress that went up in flames, per Death and Taxes. Mansfield died in the hospital the next day (November
30, 1923) from severe burns.
8. Steve Irwin
Known as an
Australian adventurer and animal advocate, the “Crocodile Hunter” was stung and
killed by a stingray on September 4, 2006, while filming Ocean’s Deadliest,
an underwater documentary. According to The Los Angeles Times, Irwin and his cameraman, Justin
Lyons, were in chest-deep water near Queensland, Australia. The pair came
across an 8-foot-wide stingray; after filming the stingray for a while, it
ended up attacking Irwin. “It started stabbing wildly with its tail,” Lyons
told The Los Angeles Times, “hundreds of strikes within a few
seconds.” Despite the crew’s efforts to save him, Irwin died before they could
get him help. In Lyons’ interview with The Los Angeles Times, he said Irwin’s last words were
“I’m dying.”
9. Paul Mantz
Mantz was a
legendary aviator who lost his spot at the U.S. Army Flight School after
buzzing over a train filled with high ranking officers in an effort to show off
his skills. Later, he landed a role in Air Mail, where he flew a biplane
through a hangar that wasn’t much bigger than his aircraft. Mantz then appeared
in several other films, such as For Whom the Bell Tolls, Twelve
O’Clock High, and The Wings of Eagles. The daredevil died on July 8,
1965 while performing a stunt for The Flight of the Phoenix – a
movie he came out of retirement to film, according to How Stuff Works. Mantz was flying over a desert in
Arizona when his plane struck a hill and broke into pieces, immediately killing
the aviator. Most of the film had already been shot, so filmmakers substituted
another plane for some remaining close-ups. The Flight of the Phoenix was
released later that year.
10. Roy Kinnear
While in
Toledo, Spain, filming the movie The Return of the Musketeers, Kinnear
fell from a horse. The 54-year-old British actor sustained a broken pelvis and
was taken to a hospital in Madrid. The following day, September 20, 1988,
Kinnear died from a heart attack, writes Oddee. Kinnear “played the role of Planchet, the servant of the Musketeer
d’Artagnan, a role he created in the Richard Lester hit, The Three
Musketeers, in 1974,” according to The New York Times. The director, Richard Lester, was
deeply affected by Kinnear’s death and shortly after quit his own film career,
per Oddee.
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