Sipowicz’s wife, the DA, was shot at the courthouse. He gets to her side moments after she’s hit. She looks at him, realizing she’s dying she says in an odd, almost chipper voice “Take care of the baby” and dies. At least that’s how I remember it, not having seen it since it originally aired.
Gary on “thirtysomething.” I was shell-shocked for days. (I loved Gary.)
And both of Tony’s sister, Janice’s, lovers on “The Sopranos” got great write-offs. She ended up taking out the loathsome Richie April after he backslapped her. (You go, girl). And then we have Ralph’s departure. :eek:
I’m glad that Wesley’s character on “Angel” was heroic. Great end to a full-circle character.
Detective Cole. Would you believe I was just coming in to mention him as well? Cole was a third-tier character who mostly just got on with stuff in the background at Homicide and once got screwed over by McNulty when working on one of Omar’s murders. And yet the episode after the actor died is structured to a really large part around the wake for the character. It’s a moving and classy moment in the show.
HBO’s OZ had many memorable sendoffs, the most surprising being Augustus Hill’s since he was (and remained) the narrator. Speaking from the other side gave him a good chance to bring back some of the other 400 people killed during the course of the series, though. (I always wondered how many hundreds of prisoners would have to die before “Em City” was ruled an unqualified failure.)
Speaking of HBO, the Servila’s curse on Atia followed by her double suicide with her slave was quite the exit, which I believe Mark Antony actually said at the end of that scene.
The departure of Nurse Hathaway (Julianna Margulies) on ER was really touching. The end of the episode showed her reuniting with George Clooney, who returned for a suprise guest appearance. Too bad most of the other staff didn’t get such dignified sendoffs (helicopter crashing on Romano’s head).
Buffy’s mother on Buffy the Vampire Slayer. It was sudden, but it followed logically from what had happened in the previous couple of episodes. And the following episode, in which the characters deal with her death, was in my opinion one of the best TV shows ever.
Is he the only person, or at least the only non-military/non-aviator person, in the history of television (or the history of fiction, or in history) ever to have two (2) helicopters fall on him?
That was a great episode. I remember there were all kinds of rumors floating around: she was going to be replaced with another actress, she was just never going to be seen again, she was going to be killed by a mugger, Archie was going to find out she had a huge life insurance policy and left it to a feminist charity, etc… As it was it was much more realistic.
The final scene of the final episode of ALL IN THE FAMILY dealt with Archie potentially losing Edith. In that episode Edith has an attack of phlebitis and has been ordered to bed by her doctor at the same time that Archie needed her to cook a huge order of corned beef/cabbage for St. Patrick’s Day, so she did the cooking instead and never told Archie the doctor said it could have dire consequences. When Archie finds out (after being chewed out by the doctor for his selfishness until the doctor learns Edith didn’t tell him) he becomes furious at and very hurt by Edith for risking her life and not telling him and tells her so while she’s in bed recuperating. During his spiel he breaks down and begins crying and in a very dramatic vulnerable moment tells her that he can’t ever lose her because “wid out you, I ain’t nuttin”. It was a very moving episode, and I wondered if it was intentionally a build up to her demise.
I hated that. Worf should have left her to die when they were trying to help the Cardassian Gul defect a few episodes earlier. Would have been more poignant.
I’m not sure you’re clear on what “full-circle” means. Wesley started as an categorical, peerless dweeb and ended up as the baddest mofo west of the Rockies. That’s a 180, not a circle.
Unless there’s a third helicopter that I’m forgetting, the first one didn’t fall on him. Rather, it chopped his arm off when he got too close to the tail rotor. (It was parked on the roof, blades spinning, and he stood up suddenly from a crouching position in the wrong place.)
The second helicopter of course is the one that killed him, falling from several stories onto his hapless person while he stood in the parking lot.
Thus missing the even more ridiculous airplane falling on a housing development, which was trumped by the shoot-out in the ER to kidnap Sam and her son, trumped in turn by Neela getting trampled at an anti-war rally, and finally by the exploding ambulance.
County General: the only place in the multi-verse more dangerous than Gotham City.