Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Entertainment
  3. News

Legendary actor Gene Hackman passes away at 95

Add as a preferred source on Google
Gene Hackman in Welcome To Mooseport.
20th Century Studios

Just over two decades after retiring from Hollywood, legendary actor Gene Hackman has passed away at 95. The bodies of Hackman, his wife, Betsy Arakawa, 65, and their dog were found in their home in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Via ABC News, the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s office performed a welfare check on Hackman and Arakawa on Wednesday, February 27, when the couple was found. No cause of death has been disclosed at press time.

Recommended Videos

Hackman’s career began with small roles in the late ’50s before he broke into film in 1961 with an uncredited role as a policeman in Mad Dog Coll. Ten years later, Hackman landed the part of Detective Jimmy “Popeye” Doyle in The French Connection, which earned him the Oscar for Best Actor for 1971. Two decades after that, Hackman won another Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in Clint Eastwood’s Unforgiven, which is widely regarded as one of the best westerns ever made.

One of Hackman’s most popular roles was his turn as Lex Luthor in Superman, which he reprised for Superman 2 and Superman IV: The Quest for Peace. Hackman was a versatile performer who could effortlessly take on comedic roles in films like The Birdcage, while taking more serious roles in The Conversation and The Firm. Some of his best-known films include The Poseidon Adventure, Scarecrow, Under Fire, Enemy of the State,  The Royal Tenenbaums, and Runaway Jury.

The final movie of Hackman’s career was the comedy Welcome To Mooseport in 2004. During his retirement, Hackman wrote two novels, Payback at Morning Peak and Pursuit. But for most of the last 21 years, Hackman and his wife lived outside of the spotlight.

Blair Marnell
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Blair Marnell has been an entertainment journalist for over 15 years. His bylines have appeared in Wizard Magazine, Geek…
EXCLUSIVE: Spider-Noir showrunner Oren Uziel on creating Nicolas Cage’s dark new Spider-Man series
The Spider in the Prime Video series, Spider-Noir.

Few superhero franchises continue to dominate pop culture like Spider-Man. With upcoming films like Spider-Man: Brand New Day and Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse building up hype, Sony is now expanding the web-slinger's universe onto streaming with MGM+ and Prime Video's new live-action series, Spider-Noir, developed by Oren Uziel.

Developed by Oren Uziel, this 1930s-set noir thriller stars Nicolas Cage as Ben Reilly, a private investigator who has long abandoned his masked alter-ego, "The Spider." However, when superpowered criminals emerge in New York City, Reilly must confront his past and become a superhero once again.

Read more
Netflix has its own AI studio now, and AI-generated content is coming for your feed whether you like it or not
Netflix's secret AI studio INKubator is hiring fast, with plans to produce animated shorts using generative AI.
Netflix-voice-search

Netflix has spent years using AI to make sure you never leave the couch. Making AI-based content is the next step, I guess.

The streaming giant is staffing up a new internal studio called INKubator to produce animated short films and specials using generative AI (via TheVerge).

Read more
More ads are coming to Netflix, despite 250 million users already paying to watch stuff with ads
Your Netflix ads are about to get a whole lot more personal. Here's why you should pay attention.
netflix on tv

Netflix held its fourth annual Upfront this week, and while most of the announcements were aimed at advertisers, there is plenty in there that affects regular viewers, too. If you are on Netflix's cheaper ad-supported plan, here is what is coming your way.

So how big is Netflix's ad tier?

Read more