• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Dean Stockwell, ‘Quantum Leap’ Star, Dies at 85

TGO

Hype Train conductor. Works harder than it steams.
Absolutely loved him, I used to get home from School and wait just for Quantum Leap to come on.
This is sad.
R.I.P Al
 

Aggelos

Member
I really liked The Langoliers, way back when. Even though it was a cheap-budget TV movie, it was really fascinating.
With Dean Stockwell's character trying to delve into the mystery of what's happened to them.
Or in Wolfang Petersen's Air Force One...

RIP Dean Stockwell... Sad news.















The-Langoliers-Cast.jpg
 

MacReady13

Member
Dean Stockwell was one of the great actors of our time. He played so many varied roles and played them all so perfectly. I will always remember him from one of my fav TV shows of all time- Quantum Leap. He will be missed. RIP.
 

ManaByte

Member

I met Dean at his audition for Quantum Leap in 1988. He had agreed to ‘read’ for the Network, I was already cast. We connected immediately and my career and my life were changed that day in Brandon Tartikoff’s office. How lucky were we to get him? A few months later he would be nominated for an Academy Award for his role in Married to the Mob, but he was stuck with us. Serendipity? All I know is, he never tried to get out or complain, he loved the role and the show and the rest was history.

He became a dear friend and a mentor and we grew very close over the next five, very intense years. Dean was such a passionate man…about life, his work, his art (he was an amazing artist!), his family, all kinds of causes, people, music, the planet, cigars, golf, and on and on! Having been a famous child actor, he had a soft spot for every young actor who came on our set. He was very protective of their rights and safety and always checked in with them to make sure that they were ok. His big hearted response to the kids made all of us take notice and be better guardians ourselves.

In spite of having a career that came and went several times during his seventy plus years in the business, he was always grateful and delighted to have the chance to keep working. The only time he ever complained was when we called him on the golf course and told him we were ready for him to come to work! He used to announce his presence on the sound stage (if we hadn’t already caught a whiff of cigar smoke trailing in behind him), with a bellowed, “The fun starts now!” Truer words were never spoken.

I loved him dearly and was honored to know him. He made me a better human being…
 

poppabk

Cheeks Spread for Digital Only Future
204 credits to his name, starting in 1945 and ending in 2015. 70 year career. Fucking legendary.
 

ManaByte

Member

Dean and I were both in our mid-fifties when I hired him to play the smart-mouthed hologram Al Calavicci on Quantum Leap. He had just been nominated for an Oscar for his role in Married to the Mob when our series premiered. His friends in the business were all puzzled by why, at the height of his feature career, he chose to do television. Once we started filming, I once asked him the same question. He said “Work is work and I have a family to support.” And work he did. Along with Scott Bakula, Dean set the work ethic for the rest of the actors on the show.

Television films long hours, much longer than most of the feature films Dean had worked in. Yet he never complained…and if a star like Dean doesn’t complain, who can?

Dean brought a sense of fun to the set that lifted everyone’s spirits. He was constantly asked about the features he starred in and always took time to answer with stories like the one he told me:

As a child actor he did a film with Errol Flynn. He recalled how they first met. He was walking toward a sound stage hand-in-hand with his mother and his teacher when Errol Flynn approached them. He said Errol ignored his mother, ignored his teacher, and stuck his hand out saying “Hi kid. Had your first f*ck, yet?” Dean said from that moment on, he knew he was in for a great time.

Dean was never that uncouth, but he always gave us a great time.

I shall miss him.
 

Winter John

Member
First time I saw him was in Blue Velvet. It was on a double bill with Betty Blue. We didn't know anything about either film, we were just bored and looking for something to do. Anyways BB was on first and that was a cool film. Hot French goth chick goes mad. Then BV came on. The thing I remember most is the place was packed out, right up until Dennis Hopper appeared. After that scene I heard a lot of movement. I looked around and people were walking out. I never saw anything like that. It was a mass exodus. 5 minutes later the place was almost empty. I guarantee most of them people who walked out are now calling BV a classic.
 

RavageX

Member
Quantum Leap was a childhood show that me and my mom loved. This news I find especially sad, but unexpected with the way this year has been.
 
Top Bottom