Airwolf was a television series in the mid 1980s starring Jan Michael-Vincent. The show was about a high tech attack helicopter, and Jan played the pilot.
He was also a troubled alcoholic and addict, and the show was totally recast after CBS cancelled it, and USA Network picked it up for its 4th, and last, season.
Diana Muldaur had a spectacular death* on LA Law, but it wasn’t because of a dispute. The character was considered unpopular and they wrote her off the show.
And Sherry Jackson, who played their daughter, has said frequently that working with Jean Hagen was the only thing she liked about being on the show. When Hagen left Jackson also tried to quit and ended up negotiating her own departure (she was all of 16 years old at the time. She wasn’t killed off, though; just sent “off to college.” After a year in college, another actress was cast as the daughter but only appeared in a handful of episodes before being written out entirely.
I was wondering the same, they did bring him back as a hallucination in the finale, so it appears it wasn’t on bad terms, he just wasn’t going to be available. Did they really have to kill him off though?
The short-lived Lethal Weapon TV series starred Clayne Crawford and Damon Wayans. They did not get along and Clayne’s character was killed off at the end of Season 2. Although I liked the new character (played by Seann William Scott), a Lethal Weapon show isn’t quite the same without Riggs and they only got one more season out of it.
For what it is worth, I have a feeling Wayans was the difficult one to work with but I don’t have anything specific to back this up.
In The Rookie, Titus Makin who played Jackson West was killed off after he felt he was unable to justify playing the role of a Police Officer in the wake of the Black Lives Matter protests. His death scene was a bit lame (a double was used as he didn’t come back to shoot the scene) and though the cast put on sad faces for about 20 seconds, his character was never mentioned again.
Good question. I did say that just leaving because the actor no longer wanted to do the show was fair game, even if it’s not really being difficult, other than to the writers and show runners having to scramble to change the plotline.
I remember at the time though, being an avid House watcher, feeling like it was kind of rude to kill off his character, not to mention weirdly out of left field for his character to commit suicide, when Penn left for a pretty good, high-minded reason.
Marian (“Molly”) Jordan was written out of the radio show “Fibber McGee & Molly” when she went to rehab in 1938, but she managed to recover and returned to the role in 1939.
A bit of a tangent, this is the first time that I put 2 and 2 together and realized that the creator/writer of B5 is the same JMS that wrote the Spider-Man comics that I enjoyed in the early 2000s.
Huh? Care to enlighten another relative SDMB newbie (only 15 years)? So, J. Michael Straczynski was a former occasional poster to this board, and he and RealityChuck would get into it over some topic, with JMS landing some sick burns on RC? Is that what I’m picking up?
From the Wikipedia article on John Amos, “During his tenure on the sitcom, Amos openly clashed with the writers of the show, pointing to the scripts’ lack of authenticity in portraying the African-American experience. He notably criticized what he felt was too much of an emphasis on Jimmie Walker’s character J.J. and a lesser regard for the other two Evans children. He also criticized J.J.'s stereotypical buffoonish personality.” He wasn’t wrong.