David Carradine Dead (3 Viewers)

Ahmed

Principino
Sep 3, 2006
47,928
#1

June 5, 2009

US actor David Carradine, star of 1970s TV series Kung Fu and the Kill Bill movies, has been found dead in a Bangkok hotel room in what Thai police say is a possible suicide.

The US embassy in the Thai capital confirmed the death of the 72-year-old Carradine, who was in Thailand to shoot a film called Stretch.

He was found in his hotel room in Bangkok but the cause of death has not yet been established,'' an embassy official said.

Police said Carradine's body was found around 11.30am local time on Thursday in the closet of his hotel room. Local media said a maid found the actor "half-naked''.

"We suspect that he committed suicide by hanging himself,'' local police officer Pirom Janthapirom said, adding that security cameras showed no one else going in or out of Carradine's room.

"There is no trace of fighting in the hotel room and the room was locked from inside," he said, adding there was no sign of bruising on the deceased's body.

"We are investigating from where he got the rope because it does not seem it was from the hotel and all of the actor's personal belongings were intact," Pirom said.

The producer of Stretch, French firm MK2, said Carradine was found at the Nai Lert Park hotel three days before the end of filming for the movie. A spokesman for the company said Carradine's death "could be accidental''.

A spokeswoman for Carradine's Los Angeles agents said the "circumstances surrounding his death are still unknown".

The Carradine family is devastated by the news of David's passing,'' said Julie Nathanson. "There will be no further comment until more information can be confirmed.''

Carradine's manager, Chuck Binder, paid tribute to the actor, telling the BBC: "He was full of life, always wanting to work ... a great person."

Carradine was the son of prominent actor John Carradine and part of an acting family that includes brothers Keith Carradine and Robert Carradine.

He was born on December 8, 1936, during Hollywood's "Golden Age'' of cinema, though he first entered showbusiness through musical theatre on New York's Broadway.

While best known for his role as the fugitive half-Chinese Shaolin monk Kwai Chang Caine in the 1970s TV drama Kung Fu, Carradine had a long a varied career in film.

He appeared in Martin Scorsese's Boxcar Bertha in 1972, and played legendary folk singer Woody Guthrie in the 1976 film Bound for Glory, which gained him a Golden Globe nomination.

The following year, director Ingmar Bergman called on Carradine to play a wandering out-of-work American Jew in poverty-struck Weimar Germany, for the movie The Serpent's Egg.

Swedish master Bergman was said to have entrusted Carradine to take the role for his commanding physical presence, recalling that of his father.

In the following two decades Carradine continued to work, but failed to find success outside of cult B-movies, as he was beset by the use of drugs and alcohol.

In the mid-1990s, he reprised the role as Kwai Chang Caine in Kung Fu: The Legend Continues, which found home on US TV for a further 60 episodes.

A huge fan of his B-movie work during the 1980s and 1990s, director Quentin Tarantino called on Carradine to play the title character in the 2002-2003 revenge-action-epic Kill Bill and Kill Bill II.

Carradine's work on the movies earned him a fourth Golden Globe Best Actor nomination.

Married five times, most recently in 2004, and the father of two daughters, Carradine was still working at the time of his death.
 

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Osman

Koul Khara!
Aug 30, 2002
59,251
#3
R.I.P.


Weird, but first thing I think of when it comes to him, is that he is the guy the ridicolously racist tv executives hired for the Kung fu series over Bruce Lee despite not being asian or knowing Kung fu at all.
 

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