He was an incredible actor, and also, a good man. Loved him as Odo, and I also loved him in his appearances in Warehouse 13. Rest in Peace.
Nana Visitor wrote a sweet and beautiful farewell to René for Variety today:
René came into my life the way he did for so many others; I loved his performance on “Benson” and looked for him in movies and TV ever after. As a young actor, I could see every inch of him was trained to tell stories: His body, face and voice moved with ease and authority. I wanted to be like that. I would watch other actors I admired in those early days and play the game of “Who would you want to sit next to at dinner if you got the chance?” and René was always on that list.
After working with him on “Deep Space Nine” for seven years of long days and nights, and then 20 years of doing “Star Trek” conventions around the world with him, I was lucky enough to spend many dinners with him. And he was even more fascinating as a friend than I could have imagined. His stories about the work he had done and the people he had crossed paths with had lots of lessons in them and always came from a humble human perspective. When we acted together, I always had the feeling that I was playing tennis with a better player than me and felt him stretch me. I wanted to bring even more than I felt I had to the scene, because I didn’t want to waste his time.
When I visited him, a few weeks before his death, we knew it might be the last time and he gave me a present. He said, “Nana, you are one of those actors who act from their souls”. That was exactly what I loved about him. Even though his face was completely hidden by a latex mask on “Star Trek,” you could see his soul. And with the speed of the animated Genie in the “Aladdin” movies, he could go from fury to complete self deprecation to kitten sweetness to clown. When he was fed up after maybe 14 hours of being in the makeup that prevented him from being able to eat or drink in a normal way, he could have the ominous energy of a volcano about to erupt, and I would steel myself for what could come. And then suddenly he would pull out pictures of his wife Judith and his children Tessa and Remy. He would look at them as if he had never seen this modern wonder of preserving images before and offer them to me and say, ”Aren’t they just beautiful?” and I would say they were, and he would smile inside his mask like a contented child. As the writer Jon Kabat Zinn puts it in “The Full Catastrophe,” he lived the entire human experience without whitewashing the hard bits, while joyfully digging in to the good. When he laughed, it was with every bit of him, and he laughed a lot.
René had many, many friends, and I know we will all miss so much now. We will miss his mastery of being in front of an audience and entertaining them, his deep empathy for when a child goes astray, his passion for a perfect pastry that made only that pastry exist in that moment.
We will miss his enormous talent for being human, and the way he could tell stories about that experience.
Yeah, I wish I could -- was a borrowed photo. Really sad to hear of his untimely passing.You need to add in Nog as well....
I usually never visit this part of the forum. I don't think I have much to contribute here. But I came here looking for this thread, as I had to say this.
I had the immense great fortune of meeting Rene Auberjonois during his last visit to the Star Trek convention in Denver. I got into his autograph line just so I could meet him, and chat for a minute or two. I asked him the question he got so often, did he get offered the role of Father Mulcahy on the series M*A*S*H after playing 'Dago Red' Mulcahy in the feature film. He told me yes, they all did, and he refused because it would have become his life.
I mulled over what that might mean, and came to the conclusion that he didn't mean he wouldn't ever play anyone else. It meant that the M*A*S*H fandom would never allow it. William Christopher, the actor that ultimately played the character on the series (the actor from the pilot didn't keep the role), had a fruitful career after the show ended, but mainly on stage. This was because of the many guest roles he had on other shows, M*A*S*H fans would complain, both to him and to the producers of the other shows, that he had been miscast. He needed to only play Father Mulcahy, according to them. William Christopher's turn on Murder She Wrote, as that episode's killer, was very poorly received, for instance. A round of "How dare they?" and "How dare you?" letters all around was sent.
I often thought about how I would like to tell Rene how I had come to understand his answer. It saddens me I will now never get the chance. But I will always take quiet pride in knowing I had gotten the chance to ask him personally, and gotten his answer directly.
If you get that chance to meet someone you respect and admire, don't ever pass it up. It may never come again.
Yes we will.
I just rewatched "What we leave behind" the other day and remembered that line he gave where he mentioned how happy he was that the Odo character means his obituary won't just say "actor who played Clayton Endicott III in the T.V show Benson."
René Auberjonois, a ‘Deep Space Nine’ Star, Dies at 79
The busy character actor was also known for “Benson,” “Boston Legal” and several Broadway roles.
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