Tributes paid after death of ‘Back To The Future’ star James Tolkan, age 94

James Tolkan attends the "Back To The Future: The Musical"

James Tolkan, the actor best known for roles in Back to the Future and Top Gun, has died aged 94.

News of Tolkan’s death was announced by a spokesperson for his family on Thursday (March 26), as well as on the Back to the Future franchise’s website.

His career spanned more than five decades, with his first TV credit coming in 1960 with the Naked City series, and his last film credit coming in 2015’s Bone Tomahawk. He was best recognised for his work in the Back to the Future trilogy, in which he abhorred “slackers” as the stern Mr. Strickland, who he played in the 1985 original and 1989 sequel.

Later, in 1990, he returned as the grandfather of his character for the third film.

Having made a name for himself playing intense, intimidating types, Tolkan also appeared in Top Gun, playing Commander Tom Jardian – also known as Stinger – alongside franchise stars Tom Cruise, Val Kilmer, and Meg Ryan in Tony Scott’s 1986 film.

Since news of his passing emerged, fans have been reflecting on the impact of his delivery in the role, with one saying he was “responsible for some of the greatest line deliveries of all time”.

Born in 1931, Tolkan cycled through Chicago after his parents divorced and ended up in Tucson, Arizona, where he graduated from Amphitheater High School. Following a stint in the Navy, he attended Coe College and the University of Iowa, later coming to New York with $75 in his pocket to study with Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg at The Actors Studio.

He made his onscreen debut in the aforementioned Naked City, and in 1966, understudied for Robert Duvall before replacing him as Harry Roat in the original Broadway production of Wait Until Dark, starring Lee Remick.

He went on to play insurance investigator Norman Keyes on several episodes of NBC’s Remington Steele, as well as several characters over 21 instalments of A&E’s A Nero Wolfe Mystery, and also directed a few episodes.

He also guest-starred in Miami Vice, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, The Wonder Years, Leverage and many other shows.

His survivors include his wife, Parmelee, who met Tolkan on the set of the 1971 off-Broadway play Pinkville when he was acting in it and she was a prop girl, and they married that year in Lake Placid.

An obituary on the Back to the Future website noted that he “adored animals, and would appreciate donations in his memory to your local animal shelter, animal rescue organisation or Humane Society chapter.”

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