David Huddleston, a character actor who already had a vast list of credits to his name when â late in his career â he took what was to become his most famous role as the title character in âThe Big Lebowski,â has died, said his wife, Sarah Koeppe. He was 85.
Koeppe, his wife and partner of 32 years, said he died of advanced heart and kidney disease Tuesday in Santa Fe, N.M.
A longtime favorite NBC character actor, Huddleston specialized in big, blustery characters. Such was the title character he played in 1998âs âThe Big Lebowski.â
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(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times) A 1990s sendup of a 1940s film-noir mystery, âThe Big Lebowskiâ traces a Raymond Chandler-esque plotline, but in place of a hard-bitten investigator, it stars a stoner lay-about played by Jeff Bridges. Huddleston, known for the line âStrong men also cry,â appeared in only a few scenes, but they are among the most memorable in the film. His knack was to play puffed-up dons, but with a wink. He managed to act comic parts with an air of being in on the joke, a device served to deflate the very grandiosity he projected.
He was born Sept. 17, 1930, in the Blue Ridge Mountains region, in Vinton, Va., and raised in Villamont, Va., where he often performed monologues in community productions, Koeppe said. After serving as an aircraft engine mechanic in the Air Force, he attended the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, where he studied acting on the G.I. Bill.
His acting career spanned more than half a century, and included Broadway, television and commercial roles. In addition to playing guest roles on numerous TV dramas, he starred in the 2005 film âThe Producers,â âSanta Claus: The Movieâ (1985) and in 1974âs âBlazing Saddles.â He told the Roanoke Times that âBlazing Saddlesâ was âprobably the most fun I have ever had on a set.â
His wife was his casting agent for âSanta Claus: The Movie.â
âThings were not important to him â people were,â she said of her husband. âHe loved entertaining and would rather sit down and talk with someone over dinner.â
Huddleston âhad thousands of cookbooks, and he loved reading them because they told him about the history of people and locations,â Koeppe said. âHe was always asking people, âIf this was your last meal, what would you have?ââ
Huddleston, the father of actor Michael Huddleston, had a passion for performing live.
âHe began on the stage. That was the part he loved the most,â Koeppe said. She said he considered his âcrowning achievementâ to be playing Benjamin Franklin in the 1997 Broadway production â1776.â
The role âbrought together all of his interests,â which included government and politics, she said. While he performed nearly his entire life starting from early childhood, he had âalways wanted to go to the University of Virginia to go to law school and be a politician.â
Five years after the Broadway production of â1776,â Huddleston performed as Ben Franklin at Fordâs Theatre in Washington, D.C.
His wife recounted traveling locals stopping them once on the streets of Kusadasi, Turkey.
âThey recognized him as the Big Lebowski even though they couldnât speak any English. They asked us to stay and told us, âwe will cook for you,â she recalled.
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UPDATES:
8:50 p.m.: This article was updated with additional details.
This article was originally published at 2:55 p.m.