logo
Cheers actor George Wendt dies aged 76

Cheers actor George Wendt dies aged 76

1News21-05-2025

George Wendt, an actor with an everyman charm who played the affable, beer-loving barfly Norm on the hit 1980s TV comedy Cheers and later crafted a stage career that took him to Broadway in Art, Hairspray and Elf, has died. He was 76.
Wendt's family said he died early Tuesday morning, peacefully in his sleep while at home, according to the publicity firm The Agency Group.
"George was a doting family man, a well-loved friend and confidant to all of those lucky enough to have known him,' the family said in a statement. "He will be missed forever." The family has requested privacy during this time.
Despite a long career of roles onstage and on TV, it was as gentle and henpecked Norm Peterson on Cheers that he was most associated, earning six straight Emmy Award nominations for best supporting actor in a comedy series from 1984-89.
The series was cantered on lovable losers in a Boston bar and starred Ted Danson, Shelley Long, Rhea Perlman, Kelsey Grammer, John Ratzenberger, Kirstie Alley and Woody Harrelson. It would spin off another megahit in Frasier and was nominated for an astounding 117 Emmy Awards, winning 28 of them.
Wendt, who spent six years in Chicago's renowned Second City improv troupe before sitting on a barstool at the place where everybody knows your name, didn't have high hopes when he auditioned for Cheers.
"My agent said, 'It's a small role, honey. It's one line. Actually, it's one word'. The word was 'beer'. I was having a hard time believing I was right for the role of 'the guy who looked like he wanted a beer'. So I went in, and they said, 'It's too small a role. Why don't you read this other one?' And it was a guy who never left the bar," Wendt told GQ in an oral history of Cheers.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I Am A Dark River: the legacy of trailblazing printer Bob Lowry
I Am A Dark River: the legacy of trailblazing printer Bob Lowry

RNZ News

timea day ago

  • RNZ News

I Am A Dark River: the legacy of trailblazing printer Bob Lowry

culture arts 33 minutes ago Tessa Mitchell never knew her grandfather but he has cast a long shadow. Her film I Am a Dark River is about Bob Lowry - that creative and some would say sometimes outrageous grandfather. It's been released this month for you to watch on the RNZ website after premiering last year at the New Zealand International Film Festival. We don't always get to know our grandparents. We don't always get to take up the offer of that special personal journey into an era before our own. And which ultimately brings us back to ourselves. Tessa Mitchell found her own way to do this. 25 years ago she filmed hours of interviews with Bob Lowry's family and friends as she created a theatre show about him. Watching I am A Dark River Bob Lowry comes across as the stuff of arts bohemian legend. A charismatic modernist printer and publisher, Lowry trailblazed across our nascent literary and radical cultural scene from the 1930s through to the 60s. Friend and collaborator of formative writers like Denis Glover, Allan Curnow, Hone Tuwhare and Frank Sargeson, James K Baxter said of Lowry that "the country spoke through him." The film's title I Am A Dark River comes from a Baxter poem and alludes to another side of Lowry's life. Lowry's final years were, as the producers put it, "plagued by alcoholism and mental torment, before he took his own life in 1963." In the film Mitchell and other family members ponder whether the cycle of idealism and despair that comes through in people's memories of him suggested manic depression. As narrator Tessa Mitchell asks, "Does the dark river that flowed through Bob flow through me?" Tessa is an actor, theatremaker and drama teacher known for own innovative work. Incorporating great poetry, her own performance and partner Ben Holmes music I Am a Dark River is described as a performance documentary. A warning that this story makes reference to suicide.

How painting pet portraits restored artist Julia Holden
How painting pet portraits restored artist Julia Holden

RNZ News

time15-06-2025

  • RNZ News

How painting pet portraits restored artist Julia Holden

culture arts 2:05 pm today Multi-disciplinary artist Julia Holden is better known for her live performance art, clay work and animated paintings so when she started painting pets and animals - it wasn't a turn she saw coming. But after a year of personal grief, it was the one practice that restored her. She's now exhibiting her third iteration of Best in Show; pet oil painting portraits at the Arthaus Contemporary Gallery in Tamaki Makaurau and calling for commissions for the next round. 15 percent of the sales will go towards the Pet Refuge, which provides temporary shelter for pets keeping them safe while families escape domestic violence. Julia spoke to Culture 101 about why, despite not being a pet owner herself, has found painting the animals utterly delightful and loves discovering their "selfhood". Best in Show is at Arthaus Gallery in Auckland on Wednesday to Sundays until 29 June.

What looking at art does to your brain
What looking at art does to your brain

RNZ News

time12-06-2025

  • RNZ News

What looking at art does to your brain

When seeing a great work of art, does your heart race? Do the hairs on your arms stand on end? Maybe you don't feel anything at all. Tamar Torrance is a PhD student at the University of Auckland. Photo: Supplied Tamar Torrance is a PhD researcher at the University of Auckland. Working in the relatively new field of neuroaesthetics, Tamar is conducting research into what goes on in our brains and bodies when viewing art online, in person, and through VR. She joins Emile to discuss how art and beauty can affect us physically and mentally. Photo: Henry Fuseli / Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, gift of Sir George Grey, 1887 Study for the three witches in Macbeth Photo: Henry Fuseli / Public domain

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store