LOS ANGELES – Edward Herrmann, the towering, melodious-voiced actor who brought Franklin D. Roosevelt to life in films and documentaries, won a Tony Award and charmed audiences as the stuffy dad on TV’s Gilmore Girls, died Wednesday. He was 71.
Herrmann died at Memorial Sloan Kettering Hospital of brain cancer, his son, Rory Herrmann said. The actor, who had been hospitalized for several weeks, was surrounded by family members including his wife, Star, and his three children, his son said.
“He was full of knowledge and kindness and goodness. … He always wanted to share the great and beautiful things in life,” said Rory Herrmann. That included art, music and classic cars.
The 6-foot-5 actor’s favourite role was playing President Roosevelt, his son said, which he did in projects including the TV movies Eleanor and Franklin (1976) and its sequel Eleanor and Franklin: The White House Years (1977) and in the 1982 movie musical Annie.
Herrmann also provided the voice for FDR in Ken Burns’ documentary series The Roosevelts: An Intimate History, which aired on PBS earlier this year.
Get breaking National news
His urbane tones were heard on a variety of other documentaries and on hundreds of audio books including Laura Hillenbrand’s Unbroken. He had recently narrated a documentary on cancer, Rory Herrmann said.
He appeared frequently on the big screen, in major films including Reds and The Wolf of Wall Street, and was an acclaimed stage actor whose Tony-winning performance came in 1976 for Mrs. Warren’s Profession.
Television was also a familiar home, with recent appearances on The Good Wife and How I Met Your Mother. His best-known role came on the 2000-07 series Gilmore Girls, on which he played the patrician father of a single mother (Lauren Graham).
Herrmann, a native of Washington, D.C., graduated from Bucknell University and studied his craft on a Fulbright scholarship to the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art in 1968-69.
In a 2004 interview with The Associated Press, he waggishly shared his tips for theatre audiences – especially those prone to standing ovations even for routine performances.
“Turn off your cellphone, your pagers, don’t talk, don’t unwrap the candy and DON’T STAND,” he said.
Besides his wife and son, Herrmann’s survivors include daughters Ryan and Emma. A private funeral was planned, followed by a public memorial early next week, Rory Herrmann said.
– with files by AP film writer Lindsey Bahr and AP researcher Barbara Sambriski.
Comments