Jack Kehoe, Actor in 'Serpico' and 'The Sting,' Dies at 85
He was not on the list.
The New Yorker also stood out in 'Midnight Run,' 'The
Untouchables,' 'Car Wash' and 'The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh.'
Jack Kehoe, the top-notch character actor who supported such
outstanding films as Serpico, The Sting, Midnight Run and The Untouchables, has
died. He was 85.
A resident of the Hollywood Hills, Kehoe died Jan. 14 in
after suffering a debilitating stroke in 2015, his family announced.
In '70s cult classics, Kehoe portrayed Scruggs, the cowboy
who pumps gas, in Car Wash (1976) and the marksman "Set Shot" Buford
in The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh (1979). His résumé also included Melvin and
Howard (1980), Warren Beatty's Reds (1981) and The Pope of Greenwich Village
(1984).
In the best picture Oscar winner The Sting (1973), directed
by George Roy Hill, Kehoe portrayed the Erie Kid, the grifter who participates
in the con game with Paul Newman and Robert Redford's characters to bring down
Robert Shaw's crime boss.
He also was memorable that year as Tom Keough, one of the
cops on the take, in Sidney Lumet's Serpico (1973), and he reteamed with Al
Pacino on Broadway in 1977 in David Rabe's The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel.
Kehoe played Al Capone's (Robert De Niro) bookkeeper, Payne,
in Brian De Palma's The Untouchables (1987) and Joe Pantoliano's two-timing
employee, Jerry Geisler, in Midnight Run (1988).
Born on Nov. 21, 1934, in the Astoria section of Queens,
Kehoe enlisted in the U.S. Army after high school and spent three years with
the 101st Airborne Division.
After the service, he studied with famed acting teacher
Stella Adler and appeared on Broadway in 1963 in Edward Albee's The Ballad of
the Sad Cafe and in off-Broadway productions of Bertolt Brecht's Drums in the
Night in 1967 and Eugene O'Neill's A Moon for the Misbegotten in 1968.
Kehoe made his big-screen debut as the bartender in Jimmy
Breslin's The Gang Who Couldn't Shoot Straight (1971) and followed that with a
role in Peter Yates' The Friends of Eddie Coyle (1973).
He appeared on television in the '80s reboot of The Twilight
Zone, Miami Vice and Murder, She Wrote and in films including The Star Chamber
(1983), D.O.A. (1988), Young Guns II (1990), Falling Down (1993), The Paper
(1994), Gospel According to Harry (1994) and The Game (1997), his final
onscreen appearance.
Kehoe chose not to work as often as others in the business.
"How much money does one person need in this life? How
many cars can you own? How many houses can you live in?" he asked in a
1974 story in New York magazine. "I saw those TV series stars out on the
coast riding around in their sports cars like kids with a ten-thousand-dollar
toy, crashing into trees and driving off the edges of mountains because they're
bored. They're not using themselves as actors anymore, and it all become about
making money."
Survivors include Sherry Smith, his companion of 40 years;
nephew Michael; wife Donna and their family; and niece Ronnie and her husband,
Apolinar. A funeral service will take place at Forest Lawn Cemetery.
Filmography
The Gang That
Couldn't Shoot Straight (1971) as Bartender
The Friends of
Eddie Coyle (1973) as The Beard
Serpico (1973) as
Tom Keough
The Sting (1973)
as Erie Kid
Law and Disorder
(1974) as Elliott
Car Wash (1976) as
Scruggs
The Fish That
Saved Pittsburgh (1979) as Setshot
On the Nickel
(1980) as Bad Mood
Melvin and Howard
(1980) as Jim Delgado
Reds (1981) as
Eddie
The Ballad of
Gregorio Cortez (1982) as Prosecutor Pierson
The Star Chamber
(1983) as Hingle
Two of a Kind
(1983) as Mr. Chotiner
The Pope of
Greenwich Village (1984) as Bunky
The Wild Life
(1984) as Mr. Parker
The Killers (1984)
as Harry
Flight of the
Spruce Goose (1986) as Freddie Fletcher
The Little Sister
(1986) as Nikos
The Untouchables
(1987) as Walter Payne
D.O.A. (1988) as
Customer at Raid
Midnight Run
(1988) as Jerry Geisler
Dick Tracy (1990)
as Customer at Raid
Young Guns II
(1990) as Ashmun Upson
Servants of
Twilight (1991) as Dr. Denton Boothe
Falling Down
(1993) as Street Worker
The Paper (1994)
as Phil
Gospel According
to Harry (1994) as Harry
The Game (1997) as
Lieutenant Sullivan (final film role)
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