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Gene Hackman, wife and dog found dead in home under ‘suspicious’

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Gene Hackman, wife and dog found dead in home under ‘suspicious’ circumstances; 2 other dogs found alive

The couple was found during a welfare check after their neighbor called in.

ByKevin ShalveyErica Morris, and Emily Shapiro

February 27, 2025, 10:28 AM

2:18

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Gene Hackman, wife and dog found dead in home under ‘suspicious’ circumstances

Gene Hackman, wife and dog found dead in home under ‘suspicious’ circumstancesTheir deaths were “suspicious enough in nature to require a thorough search and investigation” due to all of the “circumstances surrounding” the scene, according to the search warrant affidavit.

An investigation is underway after actor Gene Hackman, 95, and his wife, Betsy Arakawa, 64, were mysteriously found dead alongside a dog in their Santa Fe, New Mexico, home, authorities said.

The couple was found Wednesday afternoon during a welfare check after their neighbor called and was concerned about their well-being, according to the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office.

There were no obvious signs of death. Their deaths were “suspicious enough in nature to require a thorough search and investigation” due to all of the “circumstances surrounding” the scene, according to the search warrant affidavit.

Actor Gene Hackman with wife, Betsy Arakawa, in June 1993.AP

MORE: Gene Hackman, Oscar-winning star of ‘Hoosiers’ and ‘Unforgiven,’ dies at 95

The Academy Award-winning actor was found on the floor in the mud room, according to the search warrant. It appeared he fell suddenly, and he and his wife “showed obvious signs of death,” the document said.

Arakawa was found lying on her side on the floor in a bathroom, with a space heater near her body, according to the search warrant.

Her body showed signs of decomposition, the document said. There was mummification to her hands and feet, the document said.

On the counter near Arakawa was an opened prescription bottle, with pills scattered, according to the search warrant.

Actor Gene Hackman arrives with his wife, Betsy Arakawa, for the 60th Annual Golden Globe Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif., Sunday, Jan. 19, 2003.Mark J. Terrill/AP

MORE: Stars share tributes to actor Gene Hackman after his death at 95

A German shepherd was found dead about 10 to 15 feet from Arakawa, the document said.

But two other dogs were found alive. One healthy dog was near Arakawa and the other was located outside, according to the search warrant.

The Santa Fe City Fire Department found no signs of a possible carbon monoxide leak or poisoning, the document said. If there was carbon monoxide at the scene, it could have vented out of the home through the open front door before responders arrived.

New Mexico Gas Company also responded and “as of now, there are no signs or evidence indicating there were any problems associated to the pipes in and around the residence,” the document said.

Two maintenance workers said they hadn’t heard from Hackman and Arakawa in about two weeks, the document said.

MORE: Dramas, mysteries, a heist and more: Gene Hackman’s most memorable roles

A maintenance worker who initially responded to the home found the front door open, according to the search warrant affidavit. But there were no signs of forced entry and no signs items were taken or rummaged through, the document said.

Their manner and cause of death are not known, the document said.

The sheriff’s office said foul play is not suspected.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

ABC News


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Obituary: Gene Hackman, Oscar-winning star of ‘Superman’ and ‘Unforgiven,’ dies at 95

Gene Hackman
Hackman in 1972
BornEugene Allen Hackman
January 30, 1930
San Bernardino, California, U.S.
Diedc. February 26, 2025 (aged 95)
Santa Fe, New Mexico, U.S.
OccupationActor
Years active1959–2004
SpousesFaye Maltese​​(m. 1956; div. 1986)​Betsy Arakawa ​(m. 1991)​
Children3
AwardsFull list
Military Service
AllegianceUnited States
Branch U.S. Marine Corps
Service years1946–1951
Rank Private first class
OperationsOperation Beleaguer
Occupation of Japan
Awards National Defense Service Medal China Service Medal Navy Occupation Service Medal

Eugene Allen Hackman (January 30, 1930 – c. February 26, 2025) was an American actor. In a career that spanned over four decades, he received two Academy Awards, two British Academy Film Awards, and four Golden Globes.

Hackman’s two Academy Award wins were for Best Actor for his role as Jimmy “Popeye” Doyle in William Friedkin‘s action thriller The French Connection (1971) and for Best Supporting Actor for his role as a villainous Sheriff in Clint Eastwood‘s Western film Unforgiven (1992). He was Oscar-nominated for his roles as Buck Barrow in the crime drama Bonnie and Clyde (1967), a college professor in the drama I Never Sang for My Father (1970), and an FBI agent in the historical drama Mississippi Burning (1988).

Hackman gained further fame for his portrayal of Lex Luthor in Superman (1978) and its sequel Superman II (1980). He also acted in: The Poseidon Adventure (1972), Scarecrow (1973), The Conversation (1974), A Bridge Too Far (1977), Under Fire (1983), Power (1986), Loose Cannons (1990), The Firm (1993), The Quick and the Dead (1995), The Birdcage (1996), Enemy of the State (1998), Behind Enemy Lines (2001) and Runaway Jury (2003). He retired from acting after starring in Welcome to Mooseport (2004).

Early life and military service

Eugene Allen Hackman[1][2][3] was born in San Bernardino, California, US, the son of Eugene Ezra Hackman and Anna Lyda Elizabeth (née Gray).[4] He had a brother named Richard. Hackman had Pennsylvania Dutch, English, and Scottish ancestry. His mother was born in Sarnia, Ontario, Canada.[5] Hackman’s family moved frequently, finally settling in Danville, Illinois, where they lived in the house of his English-born maternal grandmother, Beatrice.[6] His father operated the printing press for the Commercial-News, a local newspaper. Hackman decided that he wanted to become an actor at age 10.[7] His parents divorced when he was 13 and his father subsequently left the family.[8][9]

Hackman in the U.S. Marine Corps

Hackman lived briefly in Storm Lake, Iowa, and spent his sophomore year at Storm Lake High School.[10] He left home at age 16, lied about his age to enlist in the United States Marine Corps, and served four and a half years as a field-radio operator. Hackman was stationed in China (Qingdao and later in Shanghai). When the Communist Revolution conquered the mainland in 1949, he was assigned to Hawaii and Japan. Following his discharge in 1951,[11] Hackman moved to New York City and had several jobs.[12] His mother died in 1962 as a result of a fire she accidentally started while smoking.[13] He began a study of journalism and television production at the University of Illinois under the G.I. Bill, but left and moved back to California.[14]

Career

Acting was something I wanted to do since I was 10 and saw my first movie, I was so captured by the action guys. Jimmy Cagney was my favorite. Without realizing it, I could see he had tremendous timing and vitality.

Gene Hackman[7]

1956–1969: Career beginnings

In 1956, Hackman began pursuing an acting career. He joined the Pasadena Playhouse in California,[12] where he befriended another aspiring actor, Dustin Hoffman.[12] Already seen as outsiders by their classmates, Hackman and Hoffman were voted “The Least Likely To Succeed”,[15][12] and Hackman got the lowest score the Pasadena Playhouse had yet given.[16] Determined to prove them wrong, Hackman moved to New York City. A 2004 article in Vanity Fair described Hackman, Hoffman, and Robert Duvall as struggling California-born actors and close friends, sharing NYC apartments in various two-person combinations in the 1960s.[17][18]

To support himself between acting jobs, Hackman was working at a Howard Johnson’s restaurant[19] when he encountered an instructor from the Pasadena Playhouse, who said that his job proved that Hackman “wouldn’t amount to anything”.[20] A Marine officer who saw him as a doorman said “Hackman, you’re a sorry son of a bitch”. Rejection motivated Hackman, who said:

It was more psychological warfare, because I wasn’t going to let those fuckers get me down. I insisted with myself that I would continue to do whatever it took to get a job. It was like me against them, and in some way, unfortunately, I still feel that way. But I think if you’re really interested in acting there is a part of you that relishes the struggle. It’s a narcotic in the way that you are trained to do this work and nobody will let you do it, so you’re a little bit nuts. You lie to people, you cheat, you do whatever it takes to get an audition, get a job.[19]

Hackman got various bit roles, for example in the film Mad Dog Coll and on multiple television series, Tallahassee 7000The United States Steel HourRoute 66Naked CityThe DefendersThe DuPont Show of the WeekEast Side/West Side, and Brenner.[21] Hackman began performing in several Off-Broadway plays, starting with The Saintliness of Margery Kempe in 1959 and including Come to the Palace of Sin in 1963. In 1963 he made his Broadway debut in Children From Their Games which had only a short run, as did A Rainy Day in Newark. However, Any Wednesday with actress Sandy Dennis was a huge Broadway success in 1964.[22] This opened the door to film work. His first credited role was in Lilith, with Jean Seberg and Warren Beatty in the leading roles.[23]

Hackman returned to Broadway in Poor Richard (1964–65) by Jean Kerr, which ran for over a hundred performances.[22] He continued to do television – The Trials of O’BrienHawkThe F.B.I. – and had a small part as Dr. John Whipple in the epic film Hawaii. He had small roles in features like First to Fight (1967), A Covenant with Death (1967), and Banning (1967). Hackman was originally cast as Mr. Robinson in the 1967 Mike Nichols film The Graduate, but Nichols fired him three weeks into rehearsal for being “too young” for the role; he was replaced by Murray Hamilton.[24] Also in 1967 he appeared in an episode of the television series The Invaders entitled “The Spores“; and as Buck Barrow in 1967‘s Bonnie and Clyde,[12] which earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor.[25]

A return to Broadway that same year, The Natural Look, ran for just one performance. Additionally he performed Off-Broadway in Fragments and The Basement. Hackman was in episodes of Iron Horse (“Leopards Try, But Leopards Can’t”) and Insight (“Confrontation”). In 1968, he appeared in an episode of I Spy, in the role of “Hunter”, in the episode “Happy Birthday… Everybody”. That same year he starred in the CBS Playhouse episode “My Father and My Mother” and the dystopian television film Shadow on the Land.[26]

In 1969, he played a ski coach in Downhill Racer and an astronaut in Marooned. Also that year, he played a member of a barnstorming skydiving team that entertained mostly at county fairs, a film which also inspired many to pursue skydiving and has a cult-like status amongst skydivers as a result: The Gypsy Moths. Hackman supported Jim Brown in two films, The Split (1968) and Riot (1969), Hackman nearly accepted the role of Mike Brady for the TV series The Brady Bunch,[27] but his agent advised that he decline it in exchange for a more promising role, which he did, but this story is said to have been exaggerated.[28]

1970–1979: Breakthrough and stardom

Hackman while celebrating the Academy Awards with cast members of The Poseidon Adventure in 1972

Hackman was nominated for a second Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for his role in I Never Sang for My Father (1970). He starred in Doctors’ Wives (1971) and The Hunting Party (1971) then won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance as New York City Detective Jimmy “Popeye” Doyle in The French Connection (1971), marking his graduation to stardom.[12]

After The French Connection, Hackman starred in ten films (not including his cameo in Young Frankenstein) over the next three years, making him the most prolific actor in Hollywood during that time frame. He followed The French Connection with leading roles in Cisco Pike (1972), Prime Cut (1972), The Poseidon Adventure (1972), Scarecrow (1973) alongside Al Pacino, which was Hackman’s favorite role of his career and won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival,[29] and Francis Ford Coppola‘s The Conversation (1974), which was nominated for several Oscars and also won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes.[12] That same year, Hackman appeared in what would become one of his most famous comedic roles, as Harold the Blind Man in Young Frankenstein.[30] Hackman also appeared in Zandy’s Bride (1974) and Night Moves (1975) for director Arthur Penn.[31][32]

Hackman played one of Teddy Roosevelt‘s former Rough Riders in the Western horse-race saga Bite the Bullet (1975).[33] He reprised his Oscar-winning role as Doyle in the sequel French Connection II (1975), and co-starred with Burt Reynolds and Liza Minnelli in Lucky Lady (1975), a notorious flop. After making The Domino Principle (1977) for Stanley Kramer, Hackman was part of an all-star cast in the war film A Bridge Too Far (1977), playing Polish General Stanisław Sosabowski, and was an officer in the French Foreign Legion in March or Die (1977).[34]

Hackman showed a talent for both comedy and the “slow burn” as criminal mastermind Lex Luthor in Superman: The Movie (1978),[35] a role he would reprise in its 1980 and 1987 sequels.[36][37]

1980–1999: Established career and acclaim

Hackman (right) with President Ronald Reagan in 1987

Gene is someone who is a very intuitive and instinctive actor … The brilliance of Gene Hackman is that he can look at a scene and he can cut through to what is necessary, and he does it with extraordinary economy—he’s the quintessential movie actor. He’s never showy ever, but he’s always right on.

Alan Parker
director of Mississippi Burning (1988)[38]

Hackman alternated between leading and supporting roles during the 1980s. He appeared opposite Barbra Streisand in All Night Long (1981) and supported Warren Beatty in Reds (1981). He played the lead in Eureka (1983) and a supporting role in Under Fire (1983). Hackman provided the voice of God in Two of a Kind (1983) and starred in Uncommon Valor (1983), Misunderstood (1984), Twice in a Lifetime (1985), Target (1985) for Arthur Penn, and Power (1986). Between 1985 and 1988, he starred in nine films, making him the busiest actor, alongside Steve Guttenberg.[39]

Hackman played a high school basketball coach in Hoosiers (1986), which a 2008 American Film Institute poll named the fourth-greatest sports film of all time.[40] After Superman IV: The Quest for Peace (1987) where Hackman also voiced Nuclear Man (who was portrayed by Mark Pillow), Hackman was in No Way Out (1987), Split Decisions (1988), Bat*21 (1988), Full Moon in Blue Water (1988), and Another Woman (1988) from Woody Allen.[41]

Hackman starred in Mississippi Burning (1988), for which he was nominated for a second Best Actor Oscar.[42] After this he appeared in The Package (1989).[43]

Hackman starred in Loose Cannons (1990) with Dan Aykroyd, and he had a supporting role in Postcards from the Edge (1990). He appeared with Anne Archer in Narrow Margin (1990), a remake of the 1952 film The Narrow Margin. After Class Action (1991) and Company Business (1991) Hackman played the sadistic sheriff “Little Bill” Daggett in the Western Unforgiven directed by Clint Eastwood and written by David Webb Peoples. Hackman had pledged to avoid violent roles, but Eastwood convinced him to take the part, which earned him a second Oscar, this time for Best Supporting Actor. The film also won Best Picture.[12]

In 1993, he appeared in Geronimo: An American Legend as Brigadier General George Crook, and co-starred with Tom Cruise as a corrupt lawyer in The Firm, a legal thriller based on the John Grisham novel of the same name. Hackman would appear in two other films based on John Grisham novels, playing convict Sam Cayhall on death row in The Chamber (1996), and jury consultant Rankin Fitch in Runaway Jury (2003). Other notable films Hackman appeared in during the 1990s include Wyatt Earp (1994) (as Nicholas Porter Earp, Wyatt Earp‘s father), The Quick and the Dead (1995) opposite Sharon StoneLeonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe, and as submarine Captain Frank Ramsey alongside Denzel Washington in Crimson Tide (1995).[44]

Hackman played film producer Harry Zimm with John Travolta in the comedy-drama Get Shorty (1995). In 1996, he took a comedic turn as conservative Senator Kevin Keeley in The Birdcage with Robin Williams and Nathan Lane.[45] He co-starred with Hugh Grant in Extreme Measures (1996) and reunited with Clint Eastwood in Absolute Power (1997). Hackman did Twilight (1998) with Paul Newman for director Robert Benton, did one of the voices for Antz (1998), and co-starred with Will Smith in Enemy of the State (1998), his character reminiscent of the one he had portrayed in The Conversation.[46]

2000–2004: Final films and retirement

Hackman co-starred with Morgan Freeman in Under Suspicion (2000), Keanu Reeves in The Replacements (2000), Owen Wilson in Behind Enemy Lines (2001), Sigourney Weaver in Heartbreakers (2001), and appeared in the David Mamet crime thriller Heist (2001),[47] as an aging professional thief of considerable skill who is forced into one final job. He made a cameo in The Mexican (2001).[48]

Hackman gained much critical acclaim[49] playing against type as the head of an eccentric family in Wes Anderson‘s comedy film The Royal Tenenbaums (2001), for which he received the Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Motion Picture Musical or Comedy.[50] In 2003, he also starred in another John Grisham legal drama, Runaway Jury, at long last getting to make a picture with his long-time friend Dustin Hoffman.[51]

In 2004, Hackman appeared alongside Ray Romano in the comedy Welcome to Mooseport, his final film acting role.[52]

Hackman was honored with the Cecil B. DeMille Award from the Golden Globe Awards for his “outstanding contribution to the entertainment field” in 2003.[53]

On July 7, 2004, Hackman gave a rare interview to Larry King, where he announced that he had no future film projects lined up and believed his acting career was over.[54] In 2008, while promoting his third novel, he confirmed that he had retired from acting.[55] He narrated three episodes of the NFL Films documentary series America’s Game: The Super Bowl Champions in 2007.

Speaking on his retirement in 2009, Hackman said:

The straw that broke the camel’s back was actually a stress test that I took in New York. The doctor advised me that my heart wasn’t in the kind of shape that I should be putting it under any stress.[56]

When asked during a GQ interview in 2011 if he would ever come out of retirement to do one more film, he said he might consider it “if I could do it in my own house, maybe, without them disturbing anything and just one or two people.”[57] He briefly came out of retirement to narrate two documentaries related to the U.S. Marine CorpsThe Unknown Flag Raiser of Iwo Jima (2016)[58] and We, the Marines (2017).[59]

Writing

Hackman at a book signing in 2008

Together with undersea archaeologist Daniel Lenihan, Hackman wrote three historical fiction novels: Wake of the Perdido Star (1999),[60] a sea adventure of the 19th century; Justice for None (2004),[61] a Depression-era tale of murder based on a real-life crime in his boyhood town of Danville[62]; and Escape from Andersonville (2008), about a prison escape during the American Civil War.[63] His first solo effort, a story of love and revenge set in the Old West titled Payback at Morning Peak, was released in 2011.[64] His final novel Pursuit, a police thriller, followed in 2013.[65]

Personal life

Marriages and family

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