Friday, December 8, 2023

Ryan O'Neal obit

Ryan O’Neal, Star of ‘Love Story,’ ‘What’s Up, Doc?’ and ‘Paper Moon,’ Dies at 82

The 'Peyton Place' and 'Barry Lyndon' actor and father of Tatum O'Neal had a decades-long relationship with Farrah Fawcett.

 He was not on the list.


Ryan O’Neal, the boyish leading man who kicked off an extraordinary 1970s run in Hollywood with his Oscar-nominated turn as the Harvard preppie Oliver in the legendary romantic tearjerker Love Story, has died. He was 82.

O’Neal died Friday, his son Patrick O’Neal, a sportscaster with Bally Sports West in Los Angeles, reported on Instagram. He had been diagnosed with chronic leukemia in 2001 and with prostate cancer in 2012.

“As a human being, my father was as generous as they come,” Patrick wrote. “And the funniest person in any room. And the most handsome clearly, but also the most charming. Lethal combo. He loved to make people laugh. It’s pretty much his goal. Didn’t matter the situation, if there was a joke to be found, he nailed it. He really wanted us laughing. And we did all laugh. Every time. We had fun. Fun in the sun.”

On the heels of his cinematic duet with Ali MacGraw, O’Neal starred with Barbra Streisand in What’s Up, Doc? (1972) and The Main Event (1979) and partnered with his 9-year-old daughter, Tatum O’Neal, in Peter Bogdanovich’s wonderful Depression-era tale, Paper Moon (1973).

O’Neal also played the title character, an Irish rogue in 18th century England, in Stanley Kubrick’s Barry Lyndon (1975), the director’s highly anticipated follow-up to A Clockwork Orange, and starred in Nickelodeon (1976), his third collaboration with Bogdanovich in the decade.

Earlier, the sandy-haired O’Neal made the ladies swoon for five seasons when he starred as Rodney Harrington on more than 500 episodes on the hit Peyton Place, the 1964-69 serialized ABC melodrama spawned by the Lana Turner movie.

O’Neal was married to and divorced from actresses Joanna Moore and Peyton Place co-star Leigh Taylor-Young before beginning an on-and-off 30-year relationship with actress and Charlie’s Angels icon Farrah Fawcett that ended with her death at age 62 on June 25, 2009.

In Arthur Hiller’s Love Story (1970), O’Neal played a college kid from a wealthy family. He sacrifices his riches as he falls for MacGraw’s lovely Jenny, a wisecracking, working-class girl, only to watch her agonizingly succumb to a rare blood disease.

In the ensuing years, watching Love Story “upsets me, actually,” he told Piers Morgan in 2011. “I lost Farrah to cancer, and I just wonder [why] that played out that way for me. One was just a big deal and so successful, and then in real life it was just the opposite, a tragedy.”

Adapted from the sensational-selling novel by Yale professor Erich Segal (who also wrote the screenplay) and released in theaters mere months after the book entered stores, Love Story — made for less than $2 million — grossed $106.4 million at the box office.

The drama also received seven Oscar nominations, including one for best picture, and won for best score. (O’Neal lost out to George C. Scott of Patton in the best actor race.)

O’Neal then signed up to star for Bogdanovich opposite Streisand in the screwball farce What’s Up, Doc?, an homage to the fabled Cary Grant–Katharine Hepburn 1938 comedy Bringing Up Baby.

Next came Paper Moon, in which he portrayed a good-natured con artist in the Midwest in the 1930s. Tatum starred as his youthful partner in crime and went on to make history as the youngest winner of a competitive Oscar, taking home the best supporting actress prize.

Patrick Ryan O’Neal was born on April 20, 1941, in Los Angeles, the older son of novelist-screenwriter Charles “Blackie” O’Neal (The Three Wishes of Jamie McRuin) and actress Patricia Callaghan. He competed in Golden Gloves events in L.A. in 1956 and 1957 and compiled a boxing record of 18-4 with 13 knockouts, according to his website.

In the late 1950s, O’Neal and his family moved to Munich, and he became infatuated with the syndicated TV series Tales of the Vikings, which shot in Europe and was produced by Kirk Douglas‘ company.

According to a 1975 newspaper account, he wrote to another producer, George Cahan, on the show: “I am six feet tall, and with a false beard I will look as much like a Viking as any actor on the set … I may be the Gary Cooper of tomorrow.”

O’Neal went on to perform as a stuntman on the series.

After appearing on such shows as The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, The Untouchables, Leave It to Beaver and My Three Sons, O’Neal co-starred opposite Richard Egan on Empire, a 1962-63 NBC Western set in New Mexico.

As Peyton Place was drawing to a close, O’Neal made his big-screen debut in The Big Bounce (1969), an Elmore Leonard adaptation that also starred then-wife Taylor-Young, then played a marathon runner in Michael Winner’s The Games. Segal adapted the screenplay, and that led to their Love Story collaboration.

In a 2014 interview with Jim Hemphill for Filmmaking magazine, O’Neal said that making Barry Lyndon was a grueling proposition. “He shoots a lot of takes, and you don’t get a stand-in,” he noted. “We shot for something like 350 days, and afterward they had to carry me away.”

He drew on his days in the ring in The Main Event, playing down-on-his-luck boxer/driving school instructor Eddie “Kid Natural” Scanlon, whose contract is owned by Streisand’s Hillary Kramer.

Also in the 1970s, O’Neal starred with Jacqueline Bisset as a computer programmer turned crook in The Thief Who Came to Dinner (1973); played a general in the World War II-set A Bridge Too Far (1977); portrayed a getaway driver in Walter Hill‘s The Driver (1978); and returned as a widower in the Love Story sequel Oliver’s Story (1978).

Later, he appeared on the big screen in So Fine (1981); Partners (1982), directed by James Burrows; Irreconcilable Differences (1984), with Shelley Long; Richard Brooks’ Fever Pitch (1985); Tough Guys Don’t Dance (1987), written and directed by Norman Mailer; Chances Are (1989), with Cybill Shepherd; Zero Effect (1998), starring Bill Pullman; and Terrence Malick‘s Knight of Cups (2015).

Paul Mazursky talked about working with O’Neal on Faithful (1996) in a 2009 story for Vanity Fair.

“He’s sweet as sugar, and he’s volatile,” the filmmaker said. “He’s got some of that Irish stuff in him, and he can blow up a bit. One day he was doing a scene and I said, ‘Bring it down a little bit,’ and Ryan said, ‘I quit! You can’t say “Bring it down” to me that loud!’

“I said, ‘If you quit, I’m going to break your nose.’ He started to cry. He’s sort of a big baby at times, but he’s a good guy, and he’s very talented. He’s had a strange career, but he was a monster star.”

Recently, O’Neal had recurring roles on the TV series Miss Match and Bones.

His relationship with Fawcett began after they were introduced by her then-husband, actor Lee Majors, in 1979. (Majors was headed to a film shoot in Canada and wanted O’Neal to take her to dinner one night because he was worried Fawcett would get lonely.)

They lived together for years in Malibu; had a son, Redmond, who went on to battle drug addiction (he and his father were arrested at home for drug possession in 2008); and starred together in the 1989 ABC dramatic telefilm Small Sacrifices and as co-anchors on the 1991 CBS sitcom Good Sports.

They broke up for a spell after Fawcett caught him in bed with a younger actress but reunited after O’Neal was diagnosed with leukemia.

In 2012, he published a memoir, Both of Us: My Life With Farrah, and three years later, he was back with MacGraw for a national tour in Love Letters.

O’Neal had Tatum and a son, Griffin, with Moore. Patrick is his son with Taylor-Young. His younger brother, Kevin, a regular on the TV version of No Time for Sergeants in the 1960s, died in January.

Griffin, who appeared in Nickelodeon with his dad and sister, was the driver in a 1986 motorboat accident that killed Gian-Carlo Coppola, then 23, son of director Francis Ford Coppola.

The son later accused his father of giving him cocaine when he was 11, and they had a brawl in 2007 that brought out the cops.

O’Neal and Tatum, who has also battled drug abuse during her life, did not get along either, and their attempt at reconciliation was documented in the 2011 OWN reality series Ryan & Tatum: The O’Neals, which lasted eight episodes.

“He meant the world to me,” Tatum said in a statement to People. “I loved him very much and know he loved me too. I’ll miss him forever, and I feel very lucky that we ended on such good terms.”

“My dad was 82 and lived a kick ass life,” Patrick wrote. “I hope the first thing he brags about in Heaven is how he sparred 2 rounds with Joe Frazier in 1966, on national TV, with Muhammad Ali doing the commentary, and went toe to toe with Smokin’ Joe. YouTube has it, and trust me, it’s so awesome. Ryan by a majority decision.”

Actor

The Waste Lands

Detective O'Connor

In Development

 

David Boreanaz and Emily Deschanel in Bones (2005)

Bones

7.8

TV Series

Max Keenan

Father Toby Coulter

2006–2017

24 episodes

 

Christian Bale in Knight of Cups (2015)

Knight of Cups

5.6

Ryan

2015

 

Slumber Party Slaughter (2012)

Slumber Party Slaughter

6.4

William O'Toole

2012

 

Shenae Grimes-Beech, Michael Steger, Dustin Milligan, AnnaLynne McCord, Jessica Stroup, and Tristan Mack Wilds in 90210 (2008)

90210

6.2

TV Series

Spence Montgomery

2010

3 episodes

 

Waste Land (2007)

Waste Land

6.9

Short

Gabriel

2007

 

Teri Hatcher, Felicity Huffman, Marcia Cross, and Eva Longoria in Desperate Housewives (2004)

Desperate Housewives

7.6

TV Series

Rodney Scavo

2005

1 episode

 

Alicia Silverstone in Miss Match (2003)

Miss Match

6.6

TV Series

Jerry Fox

2003

18 episodes

 

Taye Diggs, Jamie Kennedy, and Anthony Anderson in Malibu's Most Wanted (2003)

Malibu's Most Wanted

5.2

Bill Gluckman

2003

 

Kim Basinger, Al Pacino, and Téa Leoni in People I Know (2002)

People I Know

5.4

Cary Launer

2002

 

Epoch (2001)

Epoch

4.8

TV Movie

Allen Lysander

2001

 

Bull (2000)

Bull

7.6

TV Series

Robert Roberts Jr.

2000–2001

6 episodes

 

Mädchen Amick and Ben Gazzara in The List (2000)

The List

4.7

Richard Miller

2000

 

Ed Lauter, Charlie Mattera, Justine Miceli, and Ryan O'Neal in Gentleman B. (2000)

Gentleman B.

5.3

Phil - Bank Manager

2000

 

Ryan Reynolds and Bonnie Root in Coming Soon (1999)

Coming Soon

4.5

Dick

1999

 

Zero Effect (1998)

Zero Effect

6.9

Gregory Stark

1998

 

An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn (1997)

An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn

3.5

James Edmunds

1997

 

Hacks (1997)

Hacks

4.7

Dr. Applefield

1997

 

Cher in Faithful (1996)

Faithful

5.8

Jack Connor

1996

 

The Larry Sanders Show (1992)

The Larry Sanders Show

8.5

TV Series

Ryan O'Neal

1995

2 episodes

 

Chevy Chase and Jonathan Taylor Thomas in Man of the House (1995)

Man of the House

5.2

Man with Kite (uncredited)

1995

 

Katharine Hepburn and Ryan O'Neal in The Man Upstairs (1992)

The Man Upstairs

6.3

TV Movie

Mooney Polaski

1992

 

Ryan O'Neal in 1775 (1992)

1775

6.2

TV Movie

Jeremy Proctor

1992

 

Farrah Fawcett and Ryan O'Neal in Good Sports (1991)

Good Sports

4.5

TV Series

Bobby Tannen

1991

15 episodes

 

Small Sacrifices (1989)

Small Sacrifices

7.6

TV Mini Series

Lew Lewiston

1989

 

Robert Downey Jr., Mary Stuart Masterson, Cybill Shepherd, and Ryan O'Neal in Chances Are (1989)

Chances Are

6.5

Philip Train

1989

 

Sam Found Out: A Triple Play

7.8

TV Movie

Pimp

1988

 

Isabella Rossellini and Ryan O'Neal in Tough Guys Don't Dance (1987)

Tough Guys Don't Dance

4.9

Tim Madden

1987

 

Fever Pitch (1985)

Fever Pitch

4.1

Taggart

1985

 

Drew Barrymore, Shelley Long, and Ryan O'Neal in Irreconcilable Differences (1984)

Irreconcilable Differences

5.8

Albert Brodsky

1984

 

Partners (1982)

Partners

5.3

Sgt. Benson

1982

 

Mariangela Melato and Ryan O'Neal in So Fine (1981)

So Fine

5.0

Bobby Fine

1981

 

Green Ice (1981)

Green Ice

5.5

Joseph Wiley

1981

 

Obsession (1981)

Obsession

5.7

Theatre Patron (uncredited)

1981

 

Barbra Streisand and Ryan O'Neal in The Main Event (1979)

The Main Event

5.5

Eddie 'Kid Natural' Scanlon

1979

 

Candice Bergen and Ryan O'Neal in Oliver's Story (1978)

Oliver's Story

4.6

Oliver Barrett

1978

 

The Driver (1978)

The Driver

7.1

The Driver

1978

 

A Bridge Too Far (1977)

A Bridge Too Far

7.4

Brig. Gen. Gavin

1977

 

Nickelodeon (1976)

Nickelodeon

6.2

Leo Harrigan

1976

 

Barry Lyndon (1975)

Barry Lyndon

8.1

Barry Lyndon

1975

 

Tatum O'Neal and Ryan O'Neal in Paper Moon (1973)

Paper Moon

8.1

Moses Pray

1973

 

Jacqueline Bisset and Ryan O'Neal in The Thief Who Came to Dinner (1973)

The Thief Who Came to Dinner

6.1

Webster

1973

 

What's Up, Doc? (1972)

What's Up, Doc?

7.7

Howard Bannister

1972

 

William Holden and Ryan O'Neal in Wild Rovers (1971)

Wild Rovers

6.5

Frank Post

1971

 

Lesley Ann Warren and Ryan O'Neal in Love Hate Love (1971)

Love Hate Love

6.5

TV Movie

Russ Emery

1971

 

Ali MacGraw and Ryan O'Neal in Love Story (1970)

Love Story

6.9

Oliver

1970

 

The Games (1970)

The Games

6.2

Scott Reynolds

1970

 

Under the Yum Yum Tree (1969)

Under the Yum Yum Tree

7.1

TV Movie

Mike

1969

 

The Big Bounce (1969)

The Big Bounce

5.4

Jack Ryan

1969

 

Peyton Place (1964)

Peyton Place

7.4

TV Series

Rodney Harrington

1964–1969

501 episodes

 

European Eye

TV Movie

Ingersoll

1968

 

John McIntire in Wagon Train (1957)

Wagon Train

7.5

TV Series

Paul Phillips

1964

1 episode

 

Raymond Burr in Perry Mason (1957)

Perry Mason

8.3

TV Series

John Carew

1964

1 episode

 

James Drury, Doug McClure, and John McIntire in The Virginian (1962)

The Virginian

7.6

TV Series

Ben Anders

1963

1 episode

 

Empire (1962)

Empire

7.9

TV Series

Tal Garrett

Tal Garret

1962–1963

31 episodes

 

Tim Considine, William Frawley, Don Grady, Stanley Livingston, and Fred MacMurray in My Three Sons (1960)

My Three Sons

7.1

TV Series

Chug Williams

1962

1 episode

 

Tony Dow and Jerry Mathers in Leave It to Beaver (1957)

Leave It to Beaver

7.6

TV Series

Tom Henderson

1961

1 episode

 

Westinghouse Playhouse (1961)

Westinghouse Playhouse

8.1

TV Series

Mick

Roger

Larry

1961

3 episodes

 

Two Faces West (1960)

Two Faces West

8.1

TV Series

1961

1 episode

 

Robert Fuller and John Smith in Laramie (1959)

Laramie

7.7

TV Series

Johnny Jacobs

1961

1 episode

 

Bachelor Father (1957)

Bachelor Father

7.3

TV Series

Marty Braden

1961

1 episode

 

The DuPont Show with June Allyson (1959)

The DuPont Show with June Allyson

7.6

TV Series

Cadet Wade Farrell

1961

1 episode

 

Ronald Reagan in General Electric Theater (1953)

General Electric Theater

6.9

TV Series

Art Anderson

1960

1 episode

 

Abel Fernandez, Nicholas Georgiade, Paul Picerni, and Robert Stack in The Untouchables (1959)

The Untouchables

8.0

TV Series

Bellhop (uncredited)

1960

1 episode

 

Bob Denver and Dwayne Hickman in The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis (1959)

The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis

7.7

TV Series

Herm

1960

1 episode

 

Producer

Tatum O'Neal and Ryan O'Neal in Ryan & Tatum: The O'Neals (2011)

Ryan & Tatum: The O'Neals

6.8

TV Series

executive producer

2011

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