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Andre Braugher

Andre Braugher, known for playing Captain Raymond Holt in the hit NBC comedy Brooklyn Nine-Nine among other roles, has died. He was 61.

Per Variety and The Hollywood Reporter, Braugher’s death on Monday (December 11) was confirmed by his longtime rep Jennifer Allen, who also added that he passed away from a “brief illness”. He leaves behind his wife, actress Ami Brabson, and his sons, Michael, Isaiah, and John Wesley.

Tributes have been pouring in from various people who worked with Braugher. Terry Crews, who played Terry Jeffords in Brooklyn Nine-Nine, took to Instagram to express his condolences. “Can’t believe you’re gone so soon,” he wrote. “I’m honored to have known you, laughed with you, worked with you and shared 8 glorious years watching your irreplaceable talent. This hurts. You left us too soon.”

Marc Evan Jackson, who played Braugher’s on-screen husband on Brooklyn Nine-Nine, simply wrote: “O Captain. My Captian.”

Joe Lo Truglio, who co-starred with Braugher on Brooklyn Nine-Nine as Charles Boyle, highlighted Braugher’s role as a father and husband, writing: “We all know how powerful an actor he was, but even more, Andre knew exactly well his most important role and was deeply proud of it. He spoke often about his sons, and knew how lucky he was to have Ami.”

Joel McKinnon Miller, who played Norm Scully on the show, took to Instagram to write: “Sending love to Andre’s family and friends and all of us who had the honor of working with him.”

Miller’s onscreen companion, Dirk Blocker, who played Michael Hitchcock, also addressed Braugher’s passing. “Fiercely intelligent, remarkably kind, supportive, generous and possessed a deep and extraordinary talent, and had even more to offer,” he wrote on Instagram. “I am devastated. I love him. The 9 years I was able to work with him and to just be in his presence was truly a blessing. My heartfelt condolences go out to his family.”

Others who worked on Brooklyn Nine-Nine also paid their tributes, including Prentice Penny, who wrote for the comedy in addition to show-running Insecure. Recalling a memory on the set of Brooklyn Nine-Nine, he wrote: “One of my other favorite memories was me, him and Terry Crews talking on set. He was so warm with us and then when a white person would walk by, he’d look serious again. He then leaned in and said “Gotta keep ‘em on they toes”.”

“Several members of the crew once told me they’d never seen someone smile as much as me when I was discussing Sex and the City at length over a long lunch on an empty set with Andre,” wrote Brooklyn Nine-Nine director and editor Ryan Case. “My cheeks actually hurt.”

Spider Man: Across The Spider Verse and Cocaine Bear producer Christopher Miller, who directed Brooklyn Nine-Nine’s pilot alongside frequent collaborator Phil Lord, praised Braugher’s onscreen chemistry with Samberg, writing: “He was a kind, thoughtful, supremely talented person. The way he and Andy [Samberg’s] opposite approaches to acting baffled & then slowly influenced each other was a magical dynamic that was the heart of the show.”

Mike Royce, who created Man Of A Certain Age, a drama which Braugher starred in between 2009 and 2011, called him the “best actor in the world”, adding that his untimely death was an “incomprehensible loss”.

Other Hollywood figures have paid their respects, including Bojack Horseman writer and producer Nick Adams. Referring to Braugher’s guest appearance on the show, he wrote: “An absolute titan. Hearing this man speak words that I wrote was an absolute high point of my career”.

Sharing a clip from the pilot of Homicide: Life On The Street, TV and comics writer Jay Faerber wrote: “May he rest in peace. I’ll likely be posting more of his standout scenes from Homicide in the coming days. He’s a legend.”

Minions screenwriter Brian Lynch also wrote: “Andre Braugher’s Holt on BROOKLYN 99 was one of my favorite TV characters of all time. His deadpan delivery balanced the insanity of the show perfectly. And he was able to convey such warmth even as he was doing his masterful slow burn. May he Rest in Peace.”

Braugher was born and raised in Chicago, before he earned his bachelor’s degree in Stanford University and subsequently, his M.F.A from the Julliard School. He made his acting debut in the 1989 film, Glory, in which he played a black man who joins the first black regiment in the Union Army, playing alongside Matthew Broaderick and Denzel Washington.

Braugher’s breakout role was as Detective Frank Pembleton in the NBC police procedural, Homicide: Life On The Street, which ran from 1993 to 1999. For the role, Braugher earned a Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series, and two Television Critics Association Awards. Homicide: Life On The Street was also where he met his wife Ami Brabson, who had a recurring role on the show.

In the 2000s, Braugher’s career was marked by roles in films including Poseidon, Fantastic Four: Rise of The Silver Surfer, and Passengers, alongside starring roles in television mini-series, including 2004’s Salem’s Lot and 2006’s Thief, the latter of which earned him a Primetime Emmy.

Between 2013 and 2021, Braugher co-starred with Andy Samberg in the beloved NBC comedy, Brooklyn Nine-Nine, as the stoic Captain Raymond Holt. His performance earned him two Critics’ Choice Television Awards and four Primetime Emmy nominations.

Braugher’s final role was in the 2022 drama She Said, which starred Carey Mulligan and Zoe Kazan and was based on the 2019 book of the same name, about the New York Times journalists whose reporting sparked the #MeToo movement and resulted in the prosecution of Harvey Weinstein. In it, Braugher played journalist and editor Dean Baquet.

He was scheduled to resume shooting the Netflix murder-mystery The Residence, which had completed production for four episodes before the Writers’ Guild of America strike. While it was originally slated to restart production on January 2, it is now unclear if the show’s resumption will maintain on this date, or what the future of Braugher’s role is.

This is a developing story

The post ‘Brooklyn Nine-Nine’ star Andre Braugher has died, aged 61 appeared first on NME.

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