During the transition when Coach was always off on vacation or whatever, there was a bit I thought was pretty funny:
Sam: [going through the mail] Hey, I got a letter from Coach. He’s at his family reunion.
Norm: Oh, yeah?
Sam: He sent a picture. [shows Norm a photograph]
Norm: Sam, why is everybody in that picture except Coach black?
Sam: Well, he got an invitation by mistake, didn’t want to offend anybody by not going.
Norm: They seem to have accepted him.
Sam: Sure, he’s been going for ten years. Next year it’s at his place. Look, he signed it “Regards, Uncle Whitey.”
I didn’t know this was CGI when I first watched it. But now…damn, that’s creepy. It must have felt weird for Mr. Gandolfini and the other actor to watch later.
Peter Sellers passed away during the making of one of the Pink Panther movies - they had Inspector Clousseau “disappear” and at the end of the film there was a montage of all his funniest scenes.
In “Monk,” his therapist, Dr. Kroger, was originally played by Stanley Kamel. When Kamel died, the character died too. Then they had an episode with Monk trying to get used to a new therapist, Dr. Neven Bell, played by Héctor Elizondo. Due to Monk’s phobias and quirks, the transition was predictably traumatic.
As Elmer Lynn Hauldren, aka “the Empire Man” grew older, he was transitioned into a pretty dire CGI character. Hauldren, probably as well known to any Chicago area kid from the 70’s/80’s as their own father, passed away in 2011 but Empire carpeting still uses his CGI likeness in commercials.
OMG, I despise those Empire Carpets commercials. Rolling out a wall-to-wall shakes the whole house, but dropping an entire wood floor doesn’t? Bad choice, CGI Dude.
They still use a snippet of one of his old voiceovers usually too. Wonder if his family is still getting paid for that, or how he set things up in his will to cover that? I grew up in Wisconsin, but in a Cubs fan household, so I knew Empire as well as any Chicago kid.
Coincidentally, John Spencer’s character had last collapsed on a solitary walk at Camp David. So the death of the character worked perfectly.
He didn’t die during the making of it - that *entire *movie (Trail of the Pink Panther) was made after Peter Sellers died. All of Sellers in that movie is archival footage.
“Congratulations, Coach! All the weeks of cramming, burning the midnight oil, and drilling with your friends, it’s all paid off. We’re proud of you. All right. take care.”
Roger Delgado, the original Master on Doctor Who, was killed in a car crash in Turkey while making a film. His death was one of the reasons that Jon Pertwee, the Third Doctor and a close friend of Delgado’s, decided to leave the show.
A couple of years later, the Master appeared in a highly atrophied state, having run through his natural Time Lord regeneration cycle. A third actor made an appearance like this, before the Master did a body switch, laying the groundwork for several years’ worth of Anthony Ainley as the Master.
When Dolph Sweet died of cancer after season 4, Gimme A Break just had them start the next season with the Chief dead (don’t think they ever actually give a cause) and Nell now being in charge of the house and the daughters (not that she wasn’t already pretty much in charge). Then after a season of that, they retooled the show and had Nell and Joey move to New York for what turned out to be the final season.