John Ritter

Johnathan Southworth Ritter[1][2] (September 17, 1948 – September 11, 2003) was an American actor. He was a son of the singing cowboy star Tex Ritter and the father of actors Jason and Tyler Ritter. He is best known for playing Jack Tripper on the ABC sitcom Three's Company (1977–1984), and received a Primetime Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award for the role in 1984. Ritter briefly reprised the role on the spin-off Three's a Crowd, which aired for one season, producing 22 episodes before its cancellation in 1985.

John Ritter
Ritter in 1977
Born
Johnathan Southworth Ritter

(1948-09-17)September 17, 1948
DiedSeptember 11, 2003(2003-09-11) (aged 54)
Burbank, California, U.S.
Cause of deathAortic dissection
Resting placeForest Lawn Memorial Park, Hollywood Hills, California, U.S.
Alma materUniversity of Southern California
OccupationActor
Years active1968–2003
Known forThree's Company
Three's a Crowd
Spouses
(m. 1977; div. 1996)
(m. 1999)
Children4, including Jason and Tyler
Parents

He appeared in over 100 films and television series combined and performed on Broadway, with roles including adult Ben Hanscom in It (1990), Problem Child (1990), Problem Child 2 (1991), a dramatic turn in Sling Blade (1996), and Bad Santa in 2003 (his final live action film, which was dedicated to his memory). In 2002, Don Knotts called Ritter the "greatest physical comedian on the planet". His final roles include voicing the title character on the PBS children's program Clifford the Big Red Dog (2000–2003), for which he received four Daytime Emmy Award nominations, and as Paul Hennessy on the ABC sitcom 8 Simple Rules (2002–2003).

Early life

Johnathan Southworth Ritter was born on September 17, 1948, at Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center in Burbank, California.[3] Ritter had a birth defect known as a coloboma in his right eye. His father, Tex Ritter, was a singing cowboy and matinee star, and his mother, Dorothy Fay (née Southworth), was an actress.[4] He had an older brother, Thomas "Tom" Ritter.[5] Ritter attended Hollywood High School, where he was student body president. He attended the University of Southern California and majored in psychology with plans to have a career in politics.[6] He later changed his major to theater arts and attended the USC School of Dramatic Arts (formerly School of Theatre). Ritter was a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity at USC. While still in college, Ritter traveled to the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and West Germany to perform in plays. Ritter graduated in 1970.[7]

Career

Film and television

Ritter headlined several stage performances. After his graduation from USC in 1970, his first television acting experience was as a campus revolutionary in the television series Dan August starring Burt Reynolds and future Three's Company co-star Norman Fell. Ritter made his film debut in the 1971 Disney film The Barefoot Executive. He made guest appearances on the television series Hawaii Five-O, M*A*S*H, and many others. He had a recurring role as the Reverend Matthew Fordwick on the drama series The Waltons from October 1972 to December 1976. Because he was not a weekly cast member, he had time to pursue other roles, which he did until December 1976, when he left for a starring role in the hit sitcom Three's Company (the Americanized version of the 1970s British Thames Television series Man About the House) in 1977. In 1978, Ritter played Ringo Starr's manager on the television special Ringo. In 1982, Ritter provided the voice of Peter Dickinson in the animated film The Flight of Dragons.

Ritter in 1988

Ritter became a household name on Three's Company, portraying struggling culinary student Jack Tripper with two female roommates. Ritter co-starred opposite Joyce DeWitt and Suzanne Somers, and then later Jenilee Harrison and Priscilla Barnes. Much of the comedy centered around Jack's pretending to be gay to keep the old-fashioned landlords appeased over the co-ed living arrangements. The series spent several seasons near the top of the ratings in the United States before ending in 1984. A year-long spin-off, Three's a Crowd, ensued, as the Jack Tripper character has a live-in girlfriend and runs his own bistro. The original series has been seen continuously in reruns and is available on DVD. During the run of Three's Company, Ritter appeared in the films Hero at Large, Americathon, and They All Laughed. In 1986, he played the role of Dad in the music video for Graham Nash's song "Innocent Eyes" from the album of the same name.

Hooperman was Ritter's first regular television role after Three's Company. Detective Harry Hooperman inherits a run-down apartment building and hires Susan Smith (Debrah Farentino) to run it. A relationship follows, and Hooperman must juggle work, love, and the antics of Bijoux the dog. In 1988, John was nominated for both an Emmy Award[8] and a Golden Globe Award for his work on Hooperman. Ritter won a People's Choice Award for this role. From 1992 to 1995, Ritter returned to television for three seasons as John Hartman, aide to a U.S. Senator, in Hearts Afire. This series starred Markie Post as Georgie Anne Lahti and Billy Bob Thornton as Billy Bob Davis. He also played Garry Lejeune / Roger Tramplemain in the production Noises Off in 1992.

After his time on television, he appeared in a number of movies, most notably Problem Child and its first sequel. He co-starred with Jim Belushi in 1987's Real Men and played the lead role in Blake Edwards' 1989 film Skin Deep. He appeared in the film version of Noises Off, rejoined Billy Bob Thornton in the Oscar-winning Sling Blade (playing a kindhearted, gay, discount-store manager), and co-starred with Olivier Gruner in the 1996 action film Mercenary.

Ritter starred in many made-for-TV movies, including Gramps (1995), co-starring with Andy Griffith, Rob Hedden's The Colony (1995) with Hal Linden, Stephen King's It, Danielle Steel's Heartbeat with Polly Draper, and It Came from the Sky in 1999 with Yasmine Bleeth. Ritter also made guest appearances on television shows, such as Felicity, Ally McBeal, Scrubs, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. He also provided the voice of the title character in the animated children's show Clifford the Big Red Dog and its animated film adaptation Clifford's Really Big Movie (2004), a role for which he received four Emmy nominations. His final film was Stanley's Dinosaur Round-Up (2006), an animated direct-to-DVD film based on the television series, which was dedicated to his memory. At the time of his death, he was starring in 8 Simple Rules... for Dating My Teenage Daughter.[9][10]

Theater

In 2000, Ritter co-starred with Henry Winkler in Neil Simon's The Dinner Party at the Music Box Theatre on Broadway, portraying Claude Pichon.[11] It ran for 364 performances. Ritter won the Theatre World Award in 2001 for his performance in that work.[12] In 2003, Ritter made his final stage appearance in All About Eve at the Ahmanson Theatre.

J For J at LA's Court Theatre March 14-April 21, 2002. Starring John Ritter, Jeff Kober and Jenny Sullivan. Directed by Joseph Fuqua. Written by Jenny Sullivan.[13]

Personal life

On October 16, 1977, Ritter married actress Nancy Morgan, with whom he had three children: Jason[14][15] Carly, and Tyler.[7] They divorced on September 1, 1996.[16] He married actress Amy Yasbeck on September 18, 1999, at the Murphy Theatre in Wilmington, Ohio.[17] They had a child born in 1998.[5] Yasbeck played his love interest in the first two Problem Child movies, though as two different characters. Yasbeck also played Ritter's wife in two sitcom appearances. In 1991, both were guest stars on The Cosby Show, in which Yasbeck played the in-labor wife of Ritter's basketball coach character. In 1996, Ritter guest-starred on Yasbeck's sitcom, Wings, as the estranged husband of Yasbeck's character, Casey.

Death

Ritter's grave marker

On September 11, 2003, Ritter was rehearsing for 8 Simple Rules... for Dating My Teenage Daughter on the Walt Disney Studios lot in Burbank, California when he suddenly fell ill and began to experience problems with his heart. Sweating profusely, vomiting, and complaining of chest pain, he was taken across the street to the Providence Saint Joseph Medical Center (the same hospital where he had been born)[3] at 6:00 pm. Ritter was initially treated by emergency room physicians for a heart attack; however, his condition quickly worsened.[18] Ritter was then diagnosed with aortic dissection and was taken into surgery, but was pronounced dead at 10:48 p.m., at the age of 54.[3][19]

A private funeral for Ritter was held in Los Angeles on September 15, 2003, after which he was interred at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Hollywood Hills.[20][21]

In 2008, Ritter's widow Amy Yasbeck, on behalf of herself and Ritter's children, filed lawsuits against doctors involved in Ritter's treatment and Providence St. Joseph Medical Center. A number of those lawsuits were settled out of court, for a total of $14 million, including a settlement for $9.4 million with Providence St. Joseph.[22] A $67 million wrongful-death lawsuit against two of the physicians, radiologist Matthew Lotysch and cardiologist Joseph Lee, went to trial in 2008.[22] Yasbeck accused Lee, who treated Ritter on the day of his death, of misdiagnosing his condition as a heart attack and Lotysch, who had given him a full-body scan two years earlier, of failing at that time to detect an enlargement of Ritter's aorta.[23] In 2008, at the Los Angeles County Superior Court, the jury concluded that the doctors who treated Ritter the day he died were not negligent and thus were not responsible for his death.[24][25]

Response and legacy

Many of Ritter's colleagues expressed sorrow following the news of his death. Zach Braff, who worked with Ritter on Scrubs, called Ritter a "comic hero" of his and said he had approached series creator Bill Lawrence to get Ritter to play his character J.D.'s father[26] (which Ritter did for two episodes and was slated to return for a third the week following his death). Katey Sagal testified in the wrongful death lawsuit, calling Ritter a "funny man who was funny like nobody's business".[27] His Three's Company co-star Joyce DeWitt remarked he was "impossible to forget. Impossible not to love".[28]

8 Simple Rules... for Dating My Teenage Daughter was later retitled 8 Simple Rules following Ritter's death and continued for one and a half more seasons before its cancellation in 2005. Ritter's character, Paul Hennessy, was said to have died after collapsing in a grocery store while buying milk. ABC aired the first three episodes of the show's second season that had been taped before his death, each of which was introduced by Katey Sagal. The remainder of the show dealt with the family trying to grapple with Paul's death. New male characters, played by James Garner and David Spade, were later added to the main cast as Ritter's replacements. Shortly before his death, Ritter had done a week-long taping with Hollywood Squares, which was aired as a tribute to him, introduced by Henry Winkler, the executive producer of the show and a very close friend of Ritter's. Four days after Ritter's death, Nick at Nite ran an all-night Three's Company marathon dedicated to his memory.[29]

In 2004, Ritter was posthumously given an Emmy nomination for playing Paul Hennessy in 8 Simple Rules... for Dating My Teenage Daughter but lost to Kelsey Grammer for playing the title character of Frasier. Upon accepting his trophy, Grammer's remarks included comments made in tribute and remembrance of Ritter.[30] Ritter's final films, Bad Santa and Clifford's Really Big Movie, along with a Season 4 episode of Scrubs (his character in this series died, as well), the Season 8 King of the Hill episode "Stressed for Success" (in which he played music teacher Eugene Grandy) and Stanley's Dinosaur Round-Up (in which he played Great Uncle Stew) were all dedicated to his memory.[31]

On June 6, 2008, Hollywood High School dedicated a mural of Ritter painted by Eloy Torrez.[32] In March 2010, the Thoracic Aortic Disease (TAD) Coalition, in partnership with Yasbeck and the John Ritter Foundation (JRF), announced the creation of the "Ritter Rules" which are life-saving reminders to recognize, treat and prevent thoracic aortic dissection. The purpose of the JRF is to provide accurate information to the general public about the disease and its risk factors, provide support to individuals who have thoracic aortic disease or have lost a loved one to the disease and improve the identification of individuals at risk for aortic dissections and the treatment of thoracic aortic disease through medical research. Yasbeck worked with the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) to establish the John Ritter Research Program in Aortic and Vascular Diseases with the goal of preventing premature deaths due to aortic dissection by identifying genetic mutations that predispose individuals to thoracic aortic aneurysms and dissections.

Filmography

Film

YearTitleRoleNotes
1971The Barefoot ExecutiveRogerFilm debut
Scandalous JohnWendell
1972The OtherRider
1973The Stone KillerHart
1975The Prisoner of Second AvenueElevator PassengerUncredited
1976NickelodeonFranklin Frank
1977Breakfast in BedPaulShort film
1979AmericathonPresident Chet Roosevelt
1980Hero at LargeSteve Nichols
Wholly Moses!Satan (The Devil)
1981They All LaughedCharles Rutledge
1982The Flight of DragonsPeter DickinsonVoice, direct-to-video
1987Real MenBob Wilson, Agent Pillbox, CIA
1989Skin DeepZachary "Zach" Hutton
1990Problem ChildBenjamin "Ben" Healy Jr.
1991Problem Child 2
The Real Story of O Christmas TreePineyVoice, direct-to-video
1992Noises OffGarry Lejeune, Roger Tramplemain
Stay TunedRoy Knable
1994NorthWard Nelson
1996Sling BladeVaughan Cunningham
MercenaryJonas AmblerDirect-to-video
1997NowhereMoses Helper
A Gun, a Car, a BlondeDuncan, The Bartender
HacksHank
1998MontanaDr. Wexler
The Truth About LyingSimon Barker
Shadow of DoubtSteven Mayer
I Woke Up Early the Day I DiedRobert Forrest
Bride of ChuckyPolice Chief Warren Kincaid
2000PanicDr. Josh Parks
TripfallTom Williams
Lost in the Pershing Point HotelChristian Therapist
Terror TractBob Carter
TadpoleStanley Grubman
2001NuncrackersNarratorVoice, direct-to-video
2002Man of the YearBill
2003ManhoodEli
Bad SantaBob ChipeskaPosthumous release; final live-action film
2004Clifford's Really Big MovieClifford the Big Red DogVoice, posthumous release; dedicated in memory
2006Stanley's Dinosaur Round-UpGreat Uncle StewVoice, posthumous release; final film role; dedicated in memory

Television

YearTitleRoleNotes
1967The Dating GameContestantSelected as the "Winning Bachelor"
1968Crazy World, Crazy PeopleVarious charactersTV special
1970Dan AugustColey SmithEpisode: "Quadrangle for Death"
1971Hawaii Five-ORyan Moore, Mike Welles2 episodes
1972–1976The WaltonsRev. Matthew FordwickRecurring role (18 episodes)
1973Medical CenterRonnieEpisode: "End of the Line"
Bachelor-at-LawBen SykesUnsold pilot
M*A*S*HPvt. CarterEpisode: "Deal Me Out"
1974KojakKenny SoamesEpisode: "Deliver Us Some Evil"
Owen Marshall, Counselor at LawGregEpisode: "To Keep and Bear Arms"
The Bob Newhart ShowDaveEpisode: "Sorry, Wrong Mother"
1975Movin' OnCaseyEpisode: "Landslide"
RhodaVince MazumaEpisode: "Chest Pains"
MannixCliff ElginEpisode: "Hardball"
Great PerformancesRichardEpisode: "Who's Happy Now?"
The Bob Crane ShowHornbeckEpisode: "Son of the Campus Capers"
PetrocelliJohn OlesonEpisode: "Chain of Command"
Barnaby JonesJoe RockwellEpisode: "The Price of Terror"
The Streets of San FranciscoJohn 'Johnny' SteinerEpisode: "Murder by Proxy"
The Night That Panicked AmericaWalter WingateTV film
The Mary Tyler Moore ShowReverend ChatfieldEpisode: "Ted's Wedding"
The RookiesHap DawsonEpisode: "Reluctant Hero"
1976Starsky & HutchTom ColeEpisode: "The Hostages"
DocJeff, GeorgeEpisode: "A Little Bit of Soap"
RhodaJerry BlockerEpisode: "Attack on Mr. Right"
PhyllisPaul JamesonEpisode: "The New Job"
1977–1984Three's CompanyJack TripperLead role (174 episodes)
1977The Love BoatDale RileyEpisode: "Oh, Dale"
TattletalesHimself (panelist)Syndication
1978RingoMarty FleshTV film
Leave Yesterday BehindPaul Stallings
$25,000 PyramidHimself (panelist)Syndication
1979The RopersJack TripperEpisode: "The Party"
1980The AssociatesChickEpisode: "The Censors"
The Comeback KidBubba NewmanTV film
John Ritter: Being of Sound Mind and BodyHimself, Various CharactersTV special
1981InsightFrankieEpisode: "Little Miseries"
1982Pray TVTom McPhersonTV film
In Love with an Older WomanRobert Christenberry
The Fantastic Miss Piggy ShowHimself (guest star)TV special
1983Sunset LimousineAlan O'BlackTV film
The Love BoatBen CumminsEpisode: "The Emperor's Fortune"
1984Love Thy NeighborDanny LoebTV film
Pryor's PlaceHimself (guest star)Episode: "The Showoff"
1984–1985Three's a CrowdJack TripperLead role (22 episodes)
1985Letting GoAlex SchusterTV film
1986Unnatural CausesFrank Coleman
A Smoky Mountain ChristmasJudge Harold Benton
Life with LucyHimself (guest star)Episode: "Lucy Makes a Hit with John Ritter"
1987The Last FlingPhillip ReedTV film
Prison for ChildrenDavid Royce
1987–1989HoopermanDet. Harry HoopermanLead role (42 episodes)
1988Mickey's 60th BirthdayDudley GoodeTV special
Tricks of the TradeDonald TodsenTV film
1989Have FaithRick ShepherdEpisode: "The Window"
My Brother's WifeBarney RusherTV film
1990ItBen HanscomTV miniseries
The Dreamer of Oz: The L. Frank Baum StoryL. Frank BaumTV film
1991The Cosby ShowRay EvansEpisode: "Total Control"
The Summer My Father Grew UpDr. Paul SaundersTV film
Anything but LovePatrick SerreauRecurring role (5 episodes)
1992Fish PoliceInspector GillVoice, 6 episodes
1992–1995Hearts AfireJohn HartmanLead role (54 episodes)
1993HeartbeatBill GrantTelevision film
The Only Way OutJeremy Carlisle[33]
The Larry Sanders ShowHimself (guest star)Episode: "Off Camera"
1994Dave's WorldJohn HartmanEpisode: "Please Won't You Be My Neighbor"
1995GrampsClarke MacGruderTV film
The ColonyRick Knowlton
NewsRadioDr. Frank WestfordEpisode: "The Shrink"
The Larry Sanders ShowHimself (guest star)Episode: "The Fourteenth Floor"
1996UnforgivablePaul HegstromTV film
WingsStuart DavenportEpisode: "Love Overboard"
For HopeDate #5TV film (uncredited)[34]
Touched by an AngelMike O'Connor, Tom McKinsley2 episodes
1997Loss of FaithBruce Simon BarkerTV film
A Child's WishEd Chandler
Dead Man's GunHarry McDonacleSegment: "The Great McDonacle"
Over the TopJustin TalbotEpisode: "The Nemesis"
Buffy the Vampire SlayerTed BuchananEpisode: "Ted"
1997–2004King of the HillEugene GrandyVoice, 4 episodes
1998Chance of a LifetimeTom MaguireTV film
Ally McBealGeorge Madison2 episodes
Dead HusbandsDr. Carter ElstonTV film
1999Veronica's ClosetTimEpisode: "Veronica's Favorite Year"
Holy JoeRev. Joe CassTV film
It Came from the SkyDonald Bridges
Lethal VowsDr. David Farris
2000–2003Clifford the Big Red DogCliffordVoice, main role
2000Chicago HopeJoe DysmerskiEpisode: "Simon Sez"
Batman BeyondDr. David WheelerVoice, episode: "The Last Resort"
Family LawFather AndrewsEpisode: "Possession is Nine Tenths of the Law"
2000–2002FelicityMr. Andrew CovingtonRecurring role (7 episodes)
2001TuckerMartyEpisode: "Homewrecker for the Holidays"
2002The Ellen ShowPercy MossEpisode: "Gathering Moss"
Law & Order: Special Victims UnitDr. Richard ManningEpisode: "Monogamy"
Breaking NewsLloyd FuchsEpisode: "Pilot"
ScrubsSam Dorian2 episodes
2002–20038 Simple Rules... for Dating My Teenage DaughterPaul HennessyLead role (31 episodes)

Video games

YearTitleRole
2001Clifford the Big Red Dog: Learning Activities[35]Clifford
2002Clifford the Big Red Dog: Musical Memory Games[36]
2003Clifford the Big Red Dog: Phonics[37]

Awards and honors

AssociationYearCategoryWorkResult
Daytime Emmy Awards2001Outstanding Performer in an Animated ProgramClifford the Big Red DogNominated
2002
2003
2004
Primetime Emmy Awards1978Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy SeriesThree's Company
1981
1984Won
1988HoopermanNominated
1999Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy SeriesAlly McBeal
2004Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series8 Simple Rules
Golden Globe Awards1979Best Actor in a Musical/ComedyThree's Company
1980
1984Won
1987Best Actor in a Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for TelevisionUnnatural CausesNominated
1988Best TV Actor in a Musical/ComedyHooperman
People's Choice Awards1988Favorite Male Performer in a New TV Program[38]HoopermanWon
Screen Actors Guild Awards1997Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion PictureSling Blade (shared w/co-stars)Nominated
  • 1983: Star on the Walk of Fame – 6627 Hollywood Boulevard; he and Tex Ritter were the first father-and-son pair to be so honored in different categories.

References

Further reading