Adieu, Dr Alan Grant: 'Jurassic Park' star Sam Neill dies at 78
In 2023, Neill disclosed he had been diagnosed with angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma, a rare type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
PTI
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Sam Neill achieved his highest level of fame in ‘Jurassic Park’ playing Alan Grant
Wellington, 13 July
Sam Neill, a smoothly elegant and versatile actor whose
career moved from art film to blockbuster as he dodged velociraptors in ‘Jurassic
Park’ to playing Holly Hunter's husband in ‘The Piano’, has died. He was 78.
In 2023, Neill disclosed he had been diagnosed with
angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma, a rare type of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Neill
died on Monday in Sydney, according to a statement posted to the actor's social
media page. His death was “sudden and unexpected,” the statement said, adding
that he “remained cancer-free” when he died. A cause of death wasn't specified.
“Sam was surrounded by family and passed with the dignity
that has characterised his whole life,” his family wrote.
Actor came to world's notice with ‘Dead Calm' and ‘My
Brilliant Career'. Neill was one of a host of actors and directors who achieved
international fame after an explosion of Australian films that began in the
late 1970s, a list that includes Paul Hogan, Mel Gibson, Geoffrey Rush, Russell
Crowe, Jane Campion, Peter Weir and Gillian Armstrong. His range was
remarkable, playing opposite Helena Bonham Carter in the Alan Ayckbourn comedy
“Sweet Revenge” to chopping off Hunter's finger in ‘The Piano’ to poking his
own eyes out in the sci-fi horror ‘Event Horizon.’
In ‘Omen III: The Final Conflict’, he played Damien the
Antichrist and he also played Cardinal Thomas Wolsey in ‘The Tudors.’
The actor first came to the attention of international audiences
in Armstrong's 1979 film ‘My Brilliant Career’, which also introduced Judy
Davis. He later appeared in Phillip Noyce's ‘Dead Calm’, a classy thriller set
at sea and co-starring the then-relatively unknown Nicole Kidman.
Neill twice co-starred with Meryl Streep, in Australian
director Fred Schepisi's ‘Plenty’ and — again for Schepisi — in “A Cry in the
Dark”, a film about the sensationalized aftermath of a dingo killing a baby in
the Australian Outback. He earned an Emmy nomination for his performance in the
title role of the 1998 miniseries ‘Merlin’ and another as narrator of 2017's ‘Wild
New Zealand.’
‘Jurassic Park’ was his best-known film. Perhaps Neill
achieved his highest level of fame in ‘Jurassic Park’ playing paleontologist
Alan Grant, who is summoned to an island off Costa Rica where a theme park has
been built to house herds of cloned dinosaurs. He co-starred alongside Laura
Dern, Jeff Goldblum and Richard Attenborough.
His character was thoughtful and reasonable, a scientist who
warned the mastermind of the theme park before the chaos: “Dinosaurs and man,
two species separated by 65 million years of evolution have just been suddenly
thrown back into the mix together. How can we possibly have the slightest idea
what to expect?”
Grant survived the harrowing events when the creatures get
loose, but didn't return for ‘The Lost World: Jurassic Park II’ in 1997. He
came back for the third episode in 2001 and ‘Jurassic World: Dominion’ in 2022.
“It's probably a little late to learn these things,” he told the Daily New of
New York in 2001, “but I finally feel I've worked out how to be an action hero.
I'm happier with Grant this time. He's gnarly and grizzled, but he looks like
he knows what he's doing.”
Neill grew up in Northern Ireland, then New Zealand. Born in
1947 in Northern Ireland, Neill emigrated to New Zealand at the age of 7. He
was born Nigel Neill, but told interviewers he started to go by Sam because
there were too many Nigels at his school.
His family settled in Dunedin on the South Island and he was
sent to boarding school in Christchurch. After college, he took the lead in ‘Sleeping
Dogs’ in 1977, the first feature made in New Zealand in more than a decade. Neill's
other film roles included playing a Soviet submarine officer who memorably
dreams of a home in Montana in ‘The Hunt for Red October’ and an investigator
in director John Carpenter's ‘In the Mouth of Madness.’
On the small screen, Neill played the malign Chester
Campbell in TV's ‘Peaky Blinders’ and Thomas Jefferson in the four-hour CBS
miniseries, “Sally Hemings: an American Tragedy”. On Apple TV+, he was on ‘Invasion’,
playing Oklahoma Sheriff John Bell Tyson, a man late in his career searching
for his purpose. In 2024 he starred opposite Annette Bening in the Peacock
series ‘Apples Never Fall.’
The actor became known in New Zealand as a modest and
unassuming person who didn't embrace celebrity. On social media, he often
posted images of his farm animals, many of them affectionately named after
celebrities and friends, like Laura Dern the chicken, Kylie Minogue the duck
and Helena Bonham Carter the cow. New Zealand Prime Minister Christopher Luxon
mourned Neill as “one of the greats” in a statement posted to social media.
“He started out when there was barely a film industry to
speak of,” Luxon wrote. “For more than fifty years he took New Zealand stories
to the world and his talents helped make our film industry into what it is
today.”
Neill was also a vintner and under his Two Paddocks brand,
he produced pinot noir and Riesling wines from his winery in the Central Otago
region of New Zealand's South Island. His memoir “Did I Ever Tell You This?”
came out in March 2023 and he was awarded a knighthood in recognition of his
“outstanding contribution to film,” a title approved by the late Queen
Elizabeth II.
“I can't pretend that the last year hasn't had its dark
moments,” Neill told The Guardian in 2023, referring to his cancer diagnosis
and treatment. “But those dark moments throw the light into sharp relief, you
know, and have made me grateful for every day and immensely grateful for all my
friends.”
He is survived by his four children and eight grandchildren.
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