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RIP Andre Braugher

I remember him going way back to Glory. He was an intellectual from the North who knew Matthew Broderick's character and was obviously meant to be a big contrast to the 'runaway slaves' like Denzel's character.

He turned into such a great dramatic actor with a huge gravitas, but then he went and did comedic shows like Brooklyn Nine-Nine and while being the 'straight' (no pun intended) man for moments, he had his fare share of comedy and comedic lines. He could bring instant emotional impact to any scene even in the zaniest of plotlines and stories.
 
Holy fuck. Much like Lance Reddick, this feels like it came out of nowhere. I loved Braugher for the incredible work he did on Homicide: Life on the Streets but I was completely blown away but what he did on Brooklyn Nine-Nine. That show really demonstrated his range as an actor.

Rest in peace, Andre. You'll be greatly missed.

I remember him going way back to Glory. He was an intellectual from the North who knew Matthew Broderick's character and was obviously meant to be a big contrast to the 'runaway slaves' like Denzel's character.
Damn. I completely forgot he was in Glory! Clearly it's time to watch it again.
 
Rest in peace Mr. Braugher.
There were a lot of great characters in Homicide but Frank Pembleton was always riveting.
 
This is such a great shame and 61 is way too young, a great actor who could play the ultimate straight man, he was always the best thing about B99. RIP.
 
What a sad thing. I loved him on Brooklyn Nine-Nine.

The episode where he and Jake got the Mumps is one of my top ten sitcom episodes.

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RIP
 
Man, he was a lot younger than I realized. Kind of an "old soul," I guess.

He was never less than excellent and, in the case of Homicide, out and out brilliant.

(Side note: If you want to see him, Scott Bakula and Ray Romano in a very different type of show from what they're each known for--and if you can find it--check out "Men of a Certain Age," a "Thirtysomething" style dramedy that Romano produced after "Everybody Loves Raymond." Romano actually held his own with those guys.)
 
^ Andre Braugher was great in "Men of a Certain Age." It was a different kind of role for him. He usually played smart, decisive characters who had a strong presence. Owen, on "Men of Certain Age," was having a mid-life crisis. He was bullied by his father and was often overwhelmed with anxiety and self-doubt, but did his best to carry on the family business.

He was great actor with amazing range.
 
After HOMICIDE he had a seemingly unbroken string of lead roles for TV and HBO: MEN OF A CERTAIN AGE, LAST RESORT with Robert Patrick (Andre was a submarine captain), GIDEON'S CROSSING (whch tied in to or was spun off from THE PRACTICE), then his longest-running TV hit, BROOKLYN NINE-NINE. Not his first cop, but definitely in charge....of a bunch of wackos. I enjoyed his chemistry with Adam Sandberg.

Not every Hollywood film took advantage of his talents (his generic SALT role as a doomed VIP could have been any actor), but as Thomas in GLORY he became Matthew Broderick's first volunteer. Many of us liked him so much we may have even temporarily hated Denzel Washington for picking on him. Thomas, like a lot of us Trekkers, was mocked for his nerdiness. We'll never know for certain if he survived Fort Wagner, odds being perhaps 10 percent, but please, God, let it be so.

And he was the antagonist in the first half of THE MIST, who, once again, maybe, just might have survived, odds being 15 percent at best, but he stuck with his point of view, and the rest we'll simply never know. An equally fine film role. He's got funny moments in Spike Lee's GET ON THE BUS as well. (One of the drivers in that movie looks very familar.)

HOMICIDE was tampered with and its early days grossly truncated by Numbskull Broadcasting Company, which waited three entire years to give the show a full 22-episode season. (After its initial nine episodes, NBC cruelly limited year two to just FOUR.) Braugher became the unofficial star of its alphabetical ensemble, and while playing well-educated, there was no GLORY-like nerdiness this time. He was never less than ferociously brilliant. He stayed for six years, then returned after the seventh for an excellent TV-movie reunion which movingly wrapped up the series forever.....in which Detective Pembleton arrested his best friend and ex-partner (Kyle Secor). In a sense, HOMICIDE had two finales.

Braugher teamed up with Avery Brooks to perform East Coast Shakespeare as well.

If I might wrap things up by returning to HOMICIDE (the second best cop show ever, and the third-best American TV show period), during the show's 1996 season finale, it flat-out terrified me by having Braugher suffering a stroke right in the middle of an especially critical interrogation. It was Braugher's idea. He desired to stretch his character, while having him recover slowly but eventually surely from his condition. That year-four cliffhanger literally had me frightened for his fictional character. I was actually that invested in Frank Pembleton then. It was 100 times worse than Picard's third-year TNG Borgification!

He did improve over time, and while his total recovery was perhaps not entirely realistic, I'm still damn glad Frank made it. If you can only see one episode of HOMICIDE, you'll want to head straight for Year One's ''Three Men and Adena,'' guest-starring Moses Gunn, who is boxed in for 60 minutes with Braugher and Secor. You won't forget it.

Now over half of HOMICIDE's original cast members are gone. We still have Secor, Melissa Leo, Clark Johnson and Daniel Baldwin. The building they filmed in stands, but only the exterior. It's a Baltimore local landmark.

Goodbye, Andre. As Frank, you outsmarted Steve Buscemi like nobody before or since. Rest well. Just as Giardello saw Adena in the last HOMICIDE ever, I know you'll see Ned, Yaphet, Richard and Jon wherever you are just now. Good times forever for you.
 
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@the G-man

I caught an episode or two of 'Men. . .' while at my father's.
I can say it was interesting seeing all three leads playing against type.
Comments I've seen on other forums mention that show frequently.
 
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