In Loving Memory: Yaphet Kotto

15.3.2021

Yaphet Kotto

Yaphet Kotto, best known for playing a villain in the 1973 James Bond movie Live and Let Die, has died at 81.

The actor also played a crew member in the 1979 sci-fi movie Alien and starred in US TV police drama Homicide: Life on the Street.

Kotto’s other credits included the 1980s action films The Running Man and Midnight Run.

He also received an Emmy nomination for playing former Ugandan President Idi Amin in the 1977 movie Raid on Entebbe.

His TV career also included roles in The A-Team and Law and Order. He played Lieutenant Al Giardello in seven series of the gritty Homicide: Life on the Street, for which he also worked as a scriptwriter.

He died on Monday in the Philippines, his wife Sinahon Thessa said on Facebook. “You played a villain in some of your movies, but for me, you’re a real hero and to a lot of people also,” she wrote.

“A good man, a good father, a good husband, and a decent human being, very rare to find. One of the best actors in Hollywood, a Legend. Rest in Peace, Honey; I’m gonna miss you every day, my best friend, my rock.”


Tributes came from Hollywood figures, including Ava DuVernay, who said he was “one of those actors who deserved more than the parts he got,” and fellow director Edgar Wright described him as “a brilliant magnetic presence.”

Kotto was born in New York to a Cameroonian immigrant father and a US Army nurse and studied acting from 16. At 19, he made his professional theatre debut in Othello and later performed on Broadway in The Great White Hope.

His first few film projects included Nothing But a Man in 1964 and The Thomas Crown Affair in 1968.

Kotto drew plaudits for his role as the first black Bond villain Dr. Kananga – an evil Caribbean diplomat masquerading as a New York drug lord – in Live and Let Die, starring Roger Moore.

Kotto then had roles in 1974’s Truck Turner and 1978’s Blue Collar. In Ridley Scott’s Alien, he took the part of the spaceship’s engineer Dennis Parker.

Following the film’s success, Kotto turned down a role in the Star Wars sequel The Empire Strikes Back because he was wary of becoming typecast in the sci-fi genre.

“I wanted to get back down on Earth,” he said in an interview. “I was afraid that if I did another space film after having done Alien, then I’d be typed.

“Once you get one of those big blockbuster hits, you better have some other big blockbuster hits to go with it too and be Harrison Ford, because if you don’t… you place yourself right out of business.”

He also said he turned down Captain Jean-Luc Picard’s role, the character made famous by Sir Patrick Stewart in Star Trek: The Next Generation.

“I should have done that, but I walked away,” he admitted in 2015. “When making movies, you’d tend to say no to TV. It’s like when you’re in college, and someone asks you to the high school dance. You say no.”

Kotto went on to play a supporting role in Brubaker in 1980 and then appear as a resistance fighter alongside Arnold Schwarzenegger in 1987’s The Running Man and as an FBI agent in Robert De Niro’s Midnight Run the following year.

His other film credits also included Bill Cosby’s Man and Boy (1971), Across 110th Street (1972), Report to the Commissioner (1975), The Star Chamber (1983), Warning Sign (1985), Eye of the Tiger (1986) and Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991).

Kotto’s other TV roles included appearances in For Love and Honor, Murder She Wrote, and Death Valley Days. Most recently, he reprised his role as Lieutenant Giardello in Homicide: The Movie in 2000 and voiced his Alien character Parker in the Alien: Isolation video game.

Kotto is survived by six children and has been married three times.