Current:Home > FinanceRobert Brown|Tom Sizemore, 'Saving Private Ryan' actor, has died at 61 -Capitatum
Robert Brown|Tom Sizemore, 'Saving Private Ryan' actor, has died at 61
TradeEdge View
Date:2025-04-11 07:15:16
Tom Sizemore brought magnetic intensity to many of the tough guy roles he played early in his career. Gruff and Robert Browngreen-eyed, Sizemore appeared in numerous films now considered classics, perhaps most famously 1998's Saving Private Ryan. But the actor's struggles with addiction and legal problems would eclipse his talent and career.
On Feb. 18, Sizemore was hospitalized and placed in critical condition after suffering a brain aneurysm. Sizemore had remained in a coma until his death on Friday. The actor was 61 years old.
"I am very saddened by the loss of not only a client but a great friend and mentor of almost 15 years," Sizemore's manager Charles Lago said in a statement. "Tom was one of the most sincere, kind and generous human beings I have had the pleasure of knowing. His courage and determination through adversity was always an inspiration to me. The past couple of years were great for him and he was getting his life back to a great place. He loved his sons and his family. I will miss my friend Tom Sizemore greatly."
Born in Detroit, Sizemore grew up watching movies with his mother. He became fascinated with Robert De Niro's performance in Taxi Driver, as he told the website Decider in 2022.
"I saw that movie every week for, like, two months when it was playing in the theater," he said. "I saw it 11 weeks in a row. That's when I first started thinking, 'Whatever that is they're doing up there, I want to be part of it. I want to do that.' And I started to figure out how to become an actor."
Sizemore studied theater at Wayne State University and Temple University. After a period of waiting tables in New York City while trying to carve out a career, he started getting cast in an impressive streak of celebrated films.
Starting in 1989, Sizemore appeared in small roles in Born on the Fourth of July, directed by Oliver Stone, then two early movies by Kathryn Bigelow, Point Break and Blue Steel. Slowly, Sizemore worked his way into increasingly larger roles in Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man, Passenger 57, True Romance and Natural Born Killers.
He replaced Harvey Keitel in Devil in a Blue Dress and backed up his hero Robert De Niro as part of a criminal gang in Heat. Then, in Saving Private Ryan, Sizemore delivered the line that helps convince his group of fellow traumatized Army soldiers that searching for their lost comrade might be the one decent thing they do during the ugliness of World War II.
But Sizemore's life went off the rails after appearing in a few more massive Hollywood war films, including Black Hawk Down and Pearl Harbor. He was convicted of assaulting his then-fiancée Heidi Fleiss, who had been known as the "Hollywood Madam," in 2003. He was arrested multiple times for driving under the influence, possessing drugs and for domestic violence. And he allegedly behaved inappropriately with an 11-year-old girl on a film set, according to some cast and crew members, although the claim was dismissed in 2020.
Sizemore managed to keep working. He starred in the lowest-grossing movie of 2006. And repeatedly, he tried to get clean. When Sizemore appeared on Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew in 2010, he said it was his ninth stint in treatment and described his periods of sobriety as the happiest in his life.
By 2016, Sizemore was slowly working his way back into respectability, appearing as a guest in popular TV and streaming shows such as Lucifer, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, the Twin Peaks reboot and Cobra Kai.
"I'm a pitcher, an older pitcher now, and I used to throw 98 mph and I still throw 98 mph when I'm acting," he told the Daily Mail the following year.
Sizemore's brother Paul and his twin sons Jayden and Jagger, 17, were at his side when he died, according to his manager.
veryGood! (84943)
Related
- Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
- FIFA president finally breaks silence, says World Cup kiss 'should never have happened'
- Uvalde's 'Remember Their Names' festival disbanded
- Amal and George Clooney’s Date Night in Italy Is the Perfect Storm for Amore
- Man charged with murder in death of beloved Detroit-area neurosurgeon
- 2 students stabbed at Florida high school in community cleaning up from Hurricane Idalia
- After nearly 30 years, Pennsylvania will end state funding for anti-abortion counseling centers
- Prince Harry makes surprise appearance at screening for Netflix series 'Heart of Invictus'
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Texas wanted armed officers at every school after Uvalde. Many can’t meet that standard
Ranking
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Circle K has a 30-cent discount per gallon of gas on Thursday afternoon. How to get it.
- Miley Cyrus Says This Moment With Taylor Swift and Demi Lovato Shows She's Bisexual
- 2nd man charged in July shooting at massive Indiana block party that killed 1, injured 17
- Louisiana high court temporarily removes Judge Eboni Johnson Rose from Baton Rouge bench amid probe
- Pictures of Idalia's aftermath in Georgia, Carolinas show damage and flooding from hurricane's storm surge
- Nick Carter of Backstreet Boys facing civil lawsuits in Vegas alleging sexual assault decades ago
- Philadelphia police find 12-year-old boy dead in dumpster
Recommendation
Jury finds man guilty of sending 17-year-old son to rob and kill rapper PnB Rock
Why Titanic continues to captivate more than 100 years after its sinking
What has Biden started doing differently? Test yourself in this week's news quiz
Gil Brandt, longtime Cowboys personnel executive and scouting pioneer, dies at 91
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Texas guardsman suspended after wounding man in cross-border shooting, Mexico says
Travis Barker Returns Home From Blink-182 Tour for Urgent Family Matter
Opening statements begin in website founder’s 2nd trial over ads promoting prostitution