Hemsley played Jefferson,
a wisecracking owner of a dry cleaning business, on "All In the Family"
from 1973 until 1975, when the spinoff "The Jeffersons" began an
11-season run on CBS.
Police in El Paso, Texas,
where Hemsley lived, said there was no evidence of foul play. The cause
of death will be determined through an autopsy, according to a news
release.
For the first few years
on "All in the Family," George Jefferson was not seen, only referred to
by his wife, Louise, played by the late Isabel Sanford.
'Jeffersons' star Sheman Hemsley dies
He told Archive of
American Television in 2003 that he was told by the show's producers
that Jefferson should be "pompous and feisty."
Jefferson was every bit
as big a bigot as his neighbor, Archie Bunker, played by Carroll
O'Connor. Jefferson often referred to white people as "honkies."
He was also mean and
condescending to his neighbors, his son Lionel and, when he moved to a
ritzy apartment on Manhattan's East Side, to his maid. But his character
was still wildly popular with TV audiences.
"By me loving Louise and
Archie loving (his wife) Edith, you got away with being goofy and
stupid," he said in 2003. "Because people said at least he loved
something."
It made Jefferson human, he said.
One of his former co-stars said she was shocked to hear he had died.
"I thought Sherman was
doing very well," said Marla Gibbs, who played feisty maid Florence
Johnston on the "The Jeffersons." "I am saddened to hear that Sherman
has made his transition. We were trying to come up with a new show that
we could participate in, but of course, that cannot happen now.
"Sherman was one of the
most generous co-stars I have ever worked with. He happily set me up so
that I could slam him, and I did the same for him. I shall miss him
deeply."
Hemsley said he drew on
his experiences as a young man to develop Jefferson's celebrated strut,
which he did during filming as a joke.
"The way we walked in South Philly, you think you bad," he said. "You gotta be important.
"We had done about seven
or eight takes (on the 'Jeffersons' set) ... and then we started
clowning around," he said of the walk. "That's the one they kept."
Hemsley also played Deacon Ernest Frye in the sitcom "Amen."
"With the passing of
Sherman Hemsley, the world loses one of its most unique comedic talents,
and a lovely man," Norman Lear, the creator of "All in the Family,"
said in a statement.
In 2001, Lear told Larry King that he discovered Hemsley doing the Broadway play "Purlie."
He remembered him "singing and dancing, and (Hemsley) was one of the most unique actors on the stage."
In 1990, he released an album, "Ain't That a Kick in the Head," and two years later another, entitled "Dance."
"I had the pleasure of
working with him on 'House of Payne,' " said producer and director Tyler
Perry. "He brought laughter and joy to millions. My childhood would
have been a lot sadder without him. Thanks for the joy, thanks for your
talent and thanks for your life. I celebrate it in all of its beauty.
God bless you, Mr. Hemsley."
Hemsley was nominated for an Emmy in 1985 but lost to Bill Cosby.
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