Categories: Movies

James Tolkan, ‘Back to the Future’ and ‘Top Gun’ Actor, Dies at 94


James Tolkan, best known for his authoritarian roles in the Back to the Future franchise and Top Gun, died on Thursday. He was 94.

His death was announced on the Back to the Future website, which stated he died peacefully in Saranac Lake, New York. Tolkan’s prolific career spanned five decades and he appeared on Broadway, film, and television.

Born in Calumet, Michigan, in 1931, Tolkan graduated from Amphitheater High School in 1949. Following a short career in the navy during the Korean War, and stints at three colleges, he got on a bus for New York City. With just $75 in his pocket, Tolkan landed in a cold water flat where the rent equaled his VA check. As he worked on the docks, Tolkan studied acting under the guidance of Stella Adler and Lee Strasburg, going on to spend 25 years in New York theater.

While based in NYC, Tolkan made his onscreen debut in 1960 for an episode of Naked City, which aired on ABC, and took on movie roles, appearing in Prince of the City (1981) for director Sidney Lumet. Tolkan also guest-starred on numerous other television shows including The Hat Squad, Remington Steele, Miami Vice, The Wonder Years, and The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. He featured as insurance investigator Norman Keyes across five episodes of NBC’s Remington Steele, and played more than a dozen different characters on A Nero Wolfe Mystery (2001–02), directing two episodes as well.

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He moved his career to California and Canada in 1983 and would land his most memorable film roles as the “slacker”-barking Mr. Strickland in Back to the Future (1985) for director Robert Zemeckis, and the following year, as Tom Cruise’s commanding officer “Stinger” in the box office smash Top Gun.

Tolkan reprised his role in all three films in the Back to the Future franchise. Fans would forever approach him for the iconic line, which became nearly synonymous with his on-screen persona. “When we did the second and third movie we had huge trailers and it was unbelievable,” he told Impulse Gamer. “That’s what I remember — the fun of it. It’s the most fun I’ve ever had doing a movie.”

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