Peter Mayhew, who brought the Wookiee warrior Chewbacca to life in the original âStar Warsâ trilogy, has died at age 74.
The British actorâs family announced his death on social media, saying that he had died Tuesday at his home in North Texas. No cause was given.
âHe put his heart and soul into the role of Chewbacca and it showed in every frame of the films from his knock kneed running, firing his bowcaster from the hip, his bright blue eyes, down to each subtle movement of his head and mouth,â Mayhewâs family wrote in a statement. âBut, to him, the Star Wars family meant so much more to him than a role in a film.â
Standing at 7 feet 3, Mayhew was originally cast as the fierce, furry sidekick and copilot to Harrison Fordâs Han Solo owing entirely to his imposing physicality. Desperate to find someone in England who would be taller than Darth Vader, played by 6-foot-6 bodybuilder David Prowse, George Lucas found Mayhew, who had been working as a hospital orderly when he was discovered a year earlier and cast in the role of the Minotaur in Ray Harryhausenâs fantasy film âSinbad and the Eye of the Tiger.â
Mayhew did not supply Chewbaccaâs distinctive growl, which was created by âStar Warsâ sound designer Ben Burtt by combining field recordings of bears, lions, badgers and other animals. But he brought the character to life physically, whether battling Stormtroopers alongside Solo or playing chess against R2-D2 on the Millennium Falcon, drawing some inspiration for how the Wookiee should move by studying monkeys. Chewbaccaâs signature head tilt, Mayhew once said, grew out of the actorâs need to constantly duck to fit under doorways.
Though Chewbacca initially appeared on just a handful of pages in the original âStar Warsâ script, Lucas expanded the part once shooting began, and Mayhew went on to play the role throughout the original âStar Warsâ trilogy, in 1977âs âA New Hope,â 1980âs âThe Empire Strikes Backâ and 1983âs âReturn of the Jedi.â For decades afterward, he became a beloved staple on the âStar Warsâ fan convention circuit.
Mayhew reprised the role in the 2005 prequel âRevenge of the Sithâ and, despite dealing with health issues that at one point left him using a wheelchair, donned the Chewbacca suit and mask a final time for the 2015 sequel âThe Force Awakensâ before handing off the character to Finnish actor Joonas Suotamo. In a testament to the characterâs generation-spanning appeal, in 2016 a Facebook video of a Texas mom laughing hysterically while wearing a Chewbacca mask became a viral internet sensation, attracting more than 160 million views.
âHe was the gentlest of giants,â Mark Hamill, who played Luke Skywalker, wrote of Mayhew on Twitter. âA big man with an even bigger heart who never failed to make me smile & a loyal friend who I loved dearly. Iâm grateful for the memories we shared & Iâm a better man for just having known him.â
âPeter Mayhew was a kind and gentle man, possessed of great dignity and noble character,â Ford said in a statement. âThese aspects of his own personality, plus his wit and grace, he brought to Chewbacca. We were partners in film and friends in life for over 30 years and I loved him. He invested his soul in the character and brought great pleasure to the Star Wars audience.â
Mayhew is survived by his wife, Angie, and three children.
2/33
Pioneering shock jock Don Imus was one of radioâs most popular and polarizing figures. Born in Riverside, he became a top broadcaster in New York, but he also sparked a national firestorm in 2007 with a racist remark about the Rutgers University womenâs basketball team. He was 79. (Richard Drew / Associated Press)
3/33
Cokie Roberts covered Washington from Jimmy Carter to Donald Trump for NPR and ABC News. A co-anchor of the ABC Sunday political show âThis Weekâ from 1996 to 2002, Roberts devoted most of her attention to Congress, where her father Hale Boggs was a House majority leader until his death in 1972. She was 75. (Donna Svennevik / Walt Disney Television via Getty)
4/33
T. Boone Pickens followed his father into the oil and gas business and built a reputation as a maverick, unafraid to compete against industry giants. In the 1980s, Pickens sought riches on Wall Street by leading bids to take over big oil companies including Gulf, Phillips and Unocal. Even when he failed to gain control of his targets, he scored huge payoffs by selling shares back to the company and dropping the hostile takeover bid. He was 91. (Riccardo Savi / Getty Images)
5/33
When Robert Mugabe took over as Zimbabwean president in 1980, he was celebrated as a hero in the liberation war against Britain. But after international sanctions, a series of fraudulent elections and an economic collapse sparked by the seizure of white-owned farms, Mugabe become a pariah and retired in 2017 rather than face impeachment. He was 95. (Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi / Associated Press)
6/33
David Koch was the aide de camp to Charles, his older brother, as the two leveraged the family fortune to push American politics to the right. The Koch brothers pushed the boundaries of dark money in politics and fueled a backlash against environmental regulations and government programs such as healthcare and mass transit. He was 79. (Phelan M. Ebenhack / Associated Press)
7/33
Peter Fonda was the son of a classic Hollywood star and a key player in the 1969 countercultural road trip saga âEasy Rider,â which he co-wrote and produced. The screenplay earned Fonda his first Academy Award nomination; his second came in the lead actor category for the 1997 independent film âUleeâs Gold.â He was 79. (AP)
8/33
Hard-line Chinese premier Li Peng was best-known for ending the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests with a bloody crackdown by troops. A keen political infighter, he spent two decades at the pinnacle of power before retiring in 2002, leaving a legacy of prolonged economic growth and authoritarian control. He was 90. (AP)
9/33
Chris Kraft, shown with President Reagan in 1981, never flew in space but was the creator and longtime leader of NASAâs Mission Control. The legendary engineer served as flight director for all Mercury flights and seven of the Gemini flights, helped design the Apollo missions and later oversaw the beginning of the shuttle era at Johnson Space Center. He died just two days after the 50th anniversary of Apollo 11âs moon landing. He was 95. (AP)
10/33
Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens joined the court as a centrist Republican but emerged in his later years as the leading voice of its liberal bloc. Appointed by President Ford, Stevens played a key role in decisions that preserved a womanâs right to abortion, maintained a strict separation of church and state, and put limits on the death penalty. He was 99. (AP)
11/33
Billionaire Ross Perot blazed across America in the 1990s as a third-party presidential candidate and won nearly 19% of the popular vote in the 1992 election, finishing third behind Democrat Bill Clinton and Republican President George H.W. Bush. The diminutive Texan was an early tech entrepreneur who founded Electronic Data Systems, a computer services company, in 1962 with $1,000 in savings. He was 89.
(Peter Muhly / AFP/Getty Images) 12/33
Pitcher Tyler Skaggs grew up an Angels fan in Santa Monica and joined the organization as a first-round draft pick. He battled injuries throughout his career but started 24 games last season and showed signs of dominance this year. He was 27.
(Charlie Riedel / AP) 13/33
Judith Krantz wrote blockbuster romance novels including âScruplesâ and âPrincess Daisyâ that sold more than 80 million copies worldwide. Her books have been translated into more than 50 languages, and seven have been adapted as TV miniseries, with her late husband, Steve Krantz, serving as executive producer for most. She was 91.
(Aaron Rapoport / Getty Images) 14/33
Italian director Franco Zeffirelli was best-known for his films, including the 1968 critical and box office hit âRomeo and Julietâ and a 1990 âHamletâ with Mel Gibson. His massive opera productions included a version of Pucciniâs âLa Bohemeâ that became the most-often presented production in the Metropolitan Operaâs history. He was 96.
(Paolo Cocco / AFP/Getty Images) 15/33
Danish-born socialite Claus von Bulow, left, shown with attorney Alan Dershowitz in April 1985, was convicted in 1982 and then acquitted three years later on two counts of attempting to murder his American heiress wife, Sunny, with injections of insulin. The high-profile case has been called one of the most sensational courtroom dramas in modern U.S. history. He was 92.
(Charles Krupa / AP) 16/33
Herman Wouk explored the moral fallout of World War II in the Pulitzer Prize-winning âThe Caine Mutinyâ (1951) and other widely read books. Determined to produce a âgreat war book,â Wouk wrote âThe Winds of Warâ and its sequel, âWar and Remembrance,â in the 1970s, and the two sweeping novels became the basis for a pair of television miniseries. He was 103.
(Douglas L Benc Jr / AP) 17/33
Architect I.M. Pei had a client list that included French President Francois Mitterrand for the Louvre and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis for the John Fitzgerald Kennedy Library in Boston. Among several Pei projects in the Los Angeles area are the former Creative Artists Agency headquarters in Beverly Hills and the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center. He was 102.
(Pierre Gleizes / AP Photo) 18/33
Tim Conway came to prominence on television as a bumbling ensign in âMcHaleâs Navyâ opposite Ernest Borgnine from 1962 to 1966, then became a regular on âThe Carol Burnett Show,â where he famously developed a knack for making costar Harvey Korman crack up. He also starred in the âApple Dumpling Gangâ movies in the 1970s and gained fame with a new generation as the voice of Barnacle Boy on âSpongeBob SquarePants.â He was 85.
(George Brich / AP) 19/33
John Singletonâs 1991 debut, âBoyz n the Hood,â was an inner-city coming-of-age story that earned two Oscar nominations and put the young filmmaker in the company of emerging black moviemakers such as Spike Lee and Mario Van Peebles. Singleton went on to direct âPoetic Justiceâ (1993), âHigher Learningâ (1995) and âBaby Boyâ (2001), which featured Taraji P. Henson at the start of her career. He was 51.
(Christopher Polk / AFP/Getty Images) 20/33
Grammy-nominated rapper Nipsey Hussle was gunned down outside his Marathon Clothing store in the same South L.A. neighborhood where he was known as much for his civic work as he was for his hip-hop music. He was 33.
(Matt Winkelmeyer / Getty Images for Warner Music) 21/33
Sidney Sheinberg, right, with Steven Spielberg and Lea Adler, Spielbergâs mother, at a 1994 Beverly Hilton gala.
(Shepler, Lori / Los Angeles Times) 22/33
Jan-Michael Vincent was a golden boy of 1970s Hollywood action films and went on to star in the mid-1980s TV adventure series âAirwolf.â But his erratic behavior and cocaine consumption was a major reason âAirwolfâ was canceled. He was 74 by most accounts, but the death certificate listed him as 73.
(Alex Garcia / Los Angeles Times) 23/33
Sitcom star Katherine Helmond had memorable roles as ditzy matriarchs in âSoap,â âWhoâs the Boss?â and âCoach.â Her work as Jessica Tate on the 1970s parody âSoapâ earned her seven Emmy nominations, and she was nominated again in 2002 for her guest role in âEverybody Loves Raymond.â Helmond also starred in director Terry Gilliamâs films âBrazilâ and âTime Bandits.â She was 89.
(Chuck Burton / AP) 24/33
AndrĂŠ Previn conquered L.A. with his artistic genius twice: first as an Academy Award winning composer of Hollywood movie music, then as music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. A conductor and pianist who toggled between classical, pop and jazz, Previn won Oscars for âMy Fair Ladyâ (1964), âIrma la Douceâ (1963), âGigiâ (1958) and âPorgy and Bessâ (1959). He was 89.
(Patrick Downs/ Los Angeles Times) 25/33
Dodgers right-hander Don Newcombe was the first outstanding African American pitcher in the major leagues and in 1949 became the first to start a World Series game. The 6-foot-4, 240-pound hurler was also the first player in major league history to have won the rookie of the year, Most Valuable Player and Cy Young awards. He was 92.
(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times) 26/33
Michigan Democrat John Dingell Jr. used his considerable power in the House of Representatives to uncover government fraud and defend the interests of the automobile industry. Known as âBig Johnâ and âThe Truckâ for his forceful nature and 6-foot-3-inch frame, Dingell was the longest-serving member of Congress in U.S. history. He was 92.
(Win McNamee / Getty Images) 27/33
Albert Finney starred in films as diverse as âTom Jones,â âAnnieâ and âSkyfall.â One of the most versatile actors of his generation, he played an array of roles, including Winston Churchill, Pope John Paul II, a southern American lawyer and an Irish gangster. He was 82.
(Graham Barclay / For The Times) 28/33
Michelle King was the first African American woman to lead Los Angeles Unified School District. Her major accomplishment was pushing the graduation rate to record levels by allowing students to quickly make up credits for failed classes. She was 57.
(Al Seib / Los Angeles Times) 29/33
Grammy-winning singer and songwriter James Ingram topped the charts in the â80s with hits like âBaby, Come to Meâ and âSomewhere Out There.â He also co-wrote the Michael Jackson hit âP.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing).â He was 66.
(Stefano Paltera / AP) 30/33
Emmy Award-winning writer Bob Einstein was best known as stuntman Super Dave Osborne, whose feats always went wrong. The comedy veteran got his start writing for 1970s variety shows such as âThe Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour,â and he later played Larry Davidâs devout friend Marty Funkhouser on HBOâs âCurb Your Enthusiasm.â He was 76.
(Archive Photos / Getty Images) 31/33
Carol Channing was a Broadway star best known for her enduring portrayal of the title character in the musical âHello, Dolly!â A winner of three Tony Awards, including one for lifetime achievement, she appeared in the play at least 5,000 times. She was 97.
(Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images / Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images) 32/33
Mary Oliver, one of the countryâs most popular poets, focused on spirituality, nature and New England. Her poems won the Pulitzer Prize in 1984 and the National Book Award in 1992. She was 83.
(Josh Reynolds / For the Times) 33/33
Herb Kelleher built Southwest Airlines into the biggest discount carrier and set the standard for budget air travel for more than three decades. He and co-founder Rollin King used a formula of short, no-frills trips that spawned dozens of imitators. He was 87.
(Ed Betz / AP)