James Earl Jones, Distinguished Actor and Voice of Darth Vader, Dies at 93
Source: Variety
Sep 9, 2024 1:42pm PT
James Earl Jones, the prolific film, TV and theater actor whose resonant, unmistakable baritone was most widely known as the voice of "Star Wars" villain Darth Vader, died Monday morning at his home in Dutchess County, N.Y., his rep confirmed to Variety. He was 93.
After overcoming a profound stutter as a child, Jones established himself as one of the pioneering Black actors of his generation, amassing a bountiful and versatile career spanning over 60 years, from his debut on Broadway in 1958 at the Cort Theatre -- renamed the James Earl Jones Theatre in 2022 -- to his most recent performance in 2021's "Coming 2 America." For that film, Jones reprised his role as King Jaffe Joffer from the 1988 Eddie Murphy comedy "Coming to America" -- one of several roles, along with Darth Vader, that Jones revisited, including the voice of King Mustafa in Disney's animated feature "The Lion King" in 1994, the 1998 direct-to-video sequel and the 2019 remake, and CIA deputy director Vice Admiral James Greer in three Jack Ryan movies, 1990's "The Hunt for Red October," 1992's "Patriot Games" and 1994's "Clear and Present Danger."
Among his more than 80 film credits, Jones' other notable movies include as a B-52 bombardier in Stanley Kubrick's 1964 Cold War satire "Dr. Strangelove" (his feature film debut), as the first Black president of the United States in 1972's "The Man," as the fearsome villain in 1982's "Conan the Barbarian," as a reclusive author in 1989's "Field of Dreams," as a blind former baseball star in 1993's "The Sandlot," and as a minister living in apartheid South Africa in 1995's "Cry, the Beloved Country."
Jones was nominated for four Tony Awards, and won two, in 1969 for playing boxer Jack Johnson in "The Great White Hope" (which he reprised on film in 1970, receiving his only Oscar nomination), and in 1987 for originating the role of Troy Maxson in August Wilson's Pulitzer Prize-winning drama "Fences." He was nominated for eight primetime Emmy awards, winning twice in 1991, for supporting actor in the miniseries "Heat Wave," about the 1965 Watts riots, and for lead actor in the drama series "Gabriel's Fire," about a wrongfully imprisoned ex-cop who becomes a private detective. It was the first time an actor won two Emmys in the same year.
Read more: https://variety.com/2024/film/news/james-earl-jones-dead-darth-vader-lion-king-1236138656/
Damn. Knew it would be coming soon. Too many iconic roles to name. CNN has now also lost its "This is CNN" "voice".
jimfields33
(18,581 posts)irisblue
(34,159 posts)irisblue
(34,159 posts)And in Hunt for Red Octoberas Vice Admiral Jane's Greer & a CIA director were 2 of my favorites of his movies.
Javaman
(63,059 posts)I was a PA in a Southwest Bell commercial.
during a break, I got up the nerve to talk to him.
Me: "Excuse me, Mr. Jones, I just want to say that I think you are one of the greatest American actors ever".
Mr. Jones: "are you an actor?"
Me: "no, I'm just a P.A."
Mr. Jones: "Nobody is "just" anything.
He shook my hand and I walked on cloud 9 the rest of the day.
He was just a gentleman and just an overall nice guy.
rest in peace Mr. Jones, the world is little less without you.
underpants
(186,406 posts)Im sorta burying this question because I dont mean it to seem demeaning in any way - Did he stutter?
I heard an NPR show that was talking about the human brain and stuttering came up. The host or the guest said that Mr. Jones stuttered (at least sometimes) when he wasnt in a role or doing dialogue.
MissMillie
(38,949 posts)A stutter.
I closed it before I came to D.U. and now I can't find it.
BumRushDaShow
(141,427 posts)James Earl Jones was born in 1931 on a farm in in Arkabutla, Miss. His father, Robert Earl Jones, left home soon after to pursue his own acting career (the two more-or-less reconciled when the younger Jones was in his 20s, and they even performed together). When Jones was 5, he moved with his maternal grandparents to Michigan. The shock of the relocation induced a stammer so severe that he often could communicate only in writing. It wasnt until high school when he started to overcome his stutter, when his English teacher, upon learning that Jones composed poetry, encouraged him to read his writing aloud in class.
(snip)
Javaman
(63,059 posts)Im sure that was great experience
Javaman
(63,059 posts)Him saying to me that nobody is just anything. Helped me enormously. It was a very difficult time in my life.
I alway enjoyed his acting so much but then also seeing him as a genuinely kind person.. I still get weepy over it 🙂
soldierant
(7,819 posts)Here's my source:
https://www.theroot.com/breaking-news-what-you-didnt-know-about-james-earl-jon-1851644051
I had no idea. Star Wars bored me and I don't see many movies anyway. But his record in narration for pieces of classical music which require is is stunning. I mean pieces like Aaron Copoland's "A Lincoln Portrait." I've heard it with him, and I've heard it with Henry Fonda, and frankly, Jones made Fonda sound like a wimp by comparison (and he really wasn't.)
sheshe2
(87,187 posts)_Wiki
And just like Joe, he overcame his stutter.
He was an amazing man with a voice that would make the angels weep.
LakeArenal
(29,745 posts)rsdsharp
(10,088 posts)It was deeper than whale shit.
For the debate, I think Vice President should remember one of his lines from Field of Dreams: There are rules here? There are no rules here! Im going to beat you with this crowbar until you go away!
RockRaven
(16,181 posts)Big move by Kubrick.
Torchlight
(4,251 posts)Met a few in my time and was never dissapointed (I know, quite the let-down for hipster-skeptics everywhere), then lived long enough to bear witness to their deaths resulting in much greater dissapontment.
slightlv
(4,237 posts)especially rock icons from my youth. I saw Kansas when they were called "White Clover"... they played our high school homecoming dance. I remember the teachers being totally aghast at Robbie Steinhart's tattered overalls... at a formal dance! (LOL) We lost him not long ago. I'm headed to the 50th tour of Kansas in October, but I'm trying to buttress myself against not seeing him and his violin.
See all our heroes die also reminds us of our mortality around the corner, especially when the body gets frailer and frailer. This is where I've been at for the last couple of weeks.
But damn! There are just some people and voices you think will go on forever. James Earl Jones is one of those. Rest in Power, Mr. Jones. You will be missed!
JoseBalow
(4,937 posts)BumRushDaShow
(141,427 posts)from 1979. It featured Marlon Brando's first and only TV appearance AND Brando won his first and only Emmy for the role.
underpants
(186,406 posts)Wow.
BumRushDaShow
(141,427 posts)I think I had read he may have done an appearance on one of the TV talk shows but otherwise, that was his first (and only) "non-film/movie" role. And in this case, he portrayed George Lincoln Rockwell, the notorious founder and head of the American Nazi Party.
Clouds Passing
(2,072 posts)GB_RN
(3,131 posts)James Earl Jones was THE voice. 🫡 and 🖖, good sir.
electric_blue68
(17,719 posts)James Earl Jones.
Speaks2
(77 posts)The greatest reading of Poe's The Raven ever!!!
electric_blue68
(17,719 posts)there may have been a ficticious character modeled after Jackie Robinson, as well.
Liberty Belle
(9,608 posts)due to the amazing depth and resonance of his voice.
StClone
(11,869 posts)There are things in life that are so strong and stable that they cement your feet yet infuse your spirit and soaring essence. James Earl Jones's voice and acting are those things. He will forever be to me Terence Mann a live as a ghost in that field of Dreams of Iowa...my beloved Iowa.
dflprincess
(28,451 posts)(before MLB got it's hands on it).
It really was kind of magical & you almost see him sitting on the bleachers.
StClone
(11,869 posts)..is a magical thing and in that movie cast a strong spell.