Gene Hackman: A character actor and spellbinding star

February 28, 2025
Gene Hackman: A character actor and spellbinding star

The late Hollywood star Gene Hackman, known for The French Connection, The Poseidon Adventure, and Mississippi Burning, was a character actor who often played tough guys before finding his comedic stride in films like Superman and The Royal Tenenbaums.

Gene Hackman 1930-2025: A Life in Pictures

The two-time Oscar winner died on Wednesday afternoon in Sante Fe, New Mexico, at the age of 95, along with his wife Betsy Arakawa, local police have said.

Born in San Bernardino, California, Hackman's parents divorced early and he later lived with his British-born grandmother Beatrice Gray in Illinois.

Gene Hackman and Jane Fonda at the 1972 Academy Awards - Hackman won Best Actor for The French Connection and Fonda won Best Actress for Klute

He joined the United States Marine Corps as a teenager, where he spent four-and-a-half years as a field radio operator, before coming back to California where he met and studied with Dustin Hoffman.

Hackman and Hoffman treaded the boards and competed for roles in New York along with Robert Duvall.

Hoffman told the PA news agency in 2017: "I never thought that I would get hired when I was starting out.

"Bob Duvall, Gene Hackman, and myself, we were hoping just to make a living, Off-Off-Broadway, Off-Broadway, we never thought any of this would happen."

Hackman had small early roles in Lilith opposite Warren Beatty and the period drama Hawaii with Irish actor Richard Harris.

He received his big break in the 1967 true crime film Bonnie and Clyde as Barrow Gang member Buck Barrow, opposite Beatty and Faye Dunaway as the outlaw lovers.

This earned him his first Oscar nod for Best Supporting Actor and led him on to parts in neo-noir The Split and the western The Hunting Party alongside Oliver Reed and Ronald Howard.

Hackman quickly followed this up with another Academy Award nomination for the 1970 drama I Never Sang for My Father, where he played a middle-aged college professor opposite Melvyn Douglas.

That same decade, he was back at the Academy Awards – competing for Best Actor this time – with the role that would define him, Jimmy 'Popeye' Doyle, a brutal police detective whose car chase scene in 1971's The French Connection went on to inspire many other movies.

The Oscar-winning crime thriller, which saw Hackman and Roy Scheider as New York City Police Department detectives, was inspired by true events surrounding drug crime and the mob world.

When Hackman picked up the Academy Award, he kept it simple by thanking his acting teacher George Morrison and The French Connection director William Friedkin, who he said talked him out of quitting.

Hackman followed the movie up with the 1975 sequel French Connection II, which saw his character Doyle travel to France to track down a drug dealer.

During the 1970s, he had a leading role in The Poseidon Adventure as the brave Reverend Frank Scott and a memorable cameo as the blind man in Mel Brooks's horror spoof Young Frankenstein. He also appeared in the crime thriller Prime Cut, as well as Richard Attenborough's Second World War epic A Bridge Too Far, alongside Michael Caine, Sean Connery, and Anthony Hopkins.

For many audiences, Hackman will be remembered as the zany criminal mastermind and businessman Lex Luthor in Superman: The Movie (1978), and Superman II (1980), opposite Christopher Reeve as Clark Kent/The Man of Steel.

Another Best Actor nomination came for 1988's Mississippi Burning for his turn as an FBI agent who is not afraid to use every means at his disposal to investigate the murders of three Civil Rights Movement activists in the 1960s.

His final Oscar win came as Best Supporting Actor for Clint Eastwood's Unforgiven, in which he played the mean-spirted lawman Sheriff 'Little' Bill Daggett.

Again, Hackman kept it simple in his speech at the 1993 Oscars ceremony by thanking his fellow cast mates Richard Harris, Morgan Freeman, Frances Fisher, and "especially" Eastwood, who starred in the picture as well as directing.

Gene Hackman at the 1993 Academy Awards with his Oscar for Unforgiven

"I'd like to dedicate my part of this evening to my uncle Orin Hackman," he added. "He was a wonderful guy. Thank you very much."

His other roles included the 1987 Kevin Costner-starring thriller No Way Out, the 1995 military thriller Crimson Tide, the 1996 Robin Williams comedy The Birdcage, the 2000 mystery Under Suspicion, and the John Cusack-starring courtroom drama Runaway Jury (2003).

Wes Anderson's 2001 film The Royal Tenenbaums saw him play the self-absorbed patriarch Royal Tenenbaum opposite Luke Wilson, Ben Stiller, and Gwyneth Paltrow as his children. Hackman was lauded for his comic performance in the movie, going on to win a Golden Globe for Best Actor in a Musical or Comedy.

His final film role was in the 2004 political satire Welcome to Mooseport, which followed him being honoured with the Golden Globes' Cecil B DeMille Award in 2003 for his "outstanding contributions to the world of entertainment".

In 2008, Hackman told Reuters he missed "the actual acting part of it" before adding: "But the business for me is very stressful.

"The compromises that you have to make in films are just part of the beast, and it had gotten to a point where I just didn't feel like I wanted to do it anymore."

The actor was a Democrat voter but remarked to CNN presenter Larry King that he supported Republican president Ronald Reagan, calling him "a beautiful American" after meeting him at the White House.

Hackman had three children with his first wife, Faye Maltese.

In 1991, he married Arakawa, and they lived together in Sante Fe.

Source: Press Association