Robert
Guillaume, star of TV's 'Benson,' dies at age 89
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[October 25, 2017]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - Two-time Emmy
Award-winning actor Robert Guillaume, who became one of
the most prominent black actors on U.S. television
playing the cantankerous title character in the hit
1980s series "Benson," died of complications from
prostate cancer on Tuesday, his wife said. He was 89.
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The gravelly voiced Guillaume, who thrived in
Broadway musicals before starring on the TV series "Soap" and
its spinoff "Benson," died at his Los Angeles home, his wife
Donna Brown Guillaume said in a statement. It is not known how
long he had been battling cancer.
Robert Guillaume first played sarcastic and irascible butler
Benson DuBois on the over-the-top soap opera parody series
"Soap," which debuted in 1977 and also starred Katherine Helmond,
Richard Mulligan and Billy Crystal.
His work on that show won Guillaume won the Emmy for outstanding
supporting actor in a comedy series in 1979.
His character became so popular that the ABC network created
"Benson" for him and that series ran for seven seasons from 1979
to 1986. Guillaume's character had been a butler on "Soap" but
on "Benson" he served as a state governor's director of
household affairs, then state budget director, lieutenant
governor and candidate for governor.
Guillaume won the Emmy for outstanding lead actor in a comedy
series in 1985 for "Benson," the last of six times that he was
nominated for an Emmy playing the character. He became the first
black actor to win that award.
In accepting the Emmy, he joked, "I'd like to thank Bill Cosby
for not being here," referring to the fact that the star of "The
Cosby Show" and the leading contender for the award had earlier
taken himself out of the running for it.
Guillaume said he was sensitive about not playing his character
as a racial stereotype and was pleased that Benson evolved from
being a butler to a political power player - albeit one that
retained the same crotchety attitude.
'UPWARD MOBILITY'
"In all honesty and candor and modesty, I always wanted the
character to have that kind of upward mobility because it
mirrored the American dream," Guillaume told the Washington Post
in 1985.
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"When I took a role like Benson, which was in that time-honored
sense 'another black person in a servant's role,' I only took the
part because it was a good part, it was a part in which I thought,
with my own set of ideas about things, I could say something. And
indeed that has been the case. We saw Benson was in no way anyone's
inferior."
After the end of "Benson," he starred in the short-lived sitcom "The
Robert Guillaume Show" in 1989, as well as the series "Pacific
Station" (1991-1992) and "Sports Night" (1998-2000). He suffered a
stroke in 1999 on the set of "Sports Night" but was able to return
to his role within weeks.
On film, Guillaume provided the voice for the mandrill Rafiki in
Disney's animated 1994 hit "The Lion King" and appeared with Morgan
Freeman in the 1989 drama "Lean on Me."
In 1977, he earned a Tony Award nomination for his role in the
Broadway musical "Guys and Dolls." He also had leading roles on
stage in "Purlie" and "Golden Boy."
Born Robert Peter Williams on Nov. 30, 1927, he changed his name to
Robert Guillaume to make it more distinctive (Guillaume is French
for William). He was raised by his strong-willed grandmother in a
St. Louis slum after his alcoholic mother gave up her children and
his father abandoned the family.
After a brief military stint, he worked a series of jobs including
as a trolley driver to save money for college.
He studied music at Washington University in St. Louis, where he was
noticed by a Hungarian opera singer who helped him get a scholarship
to the 1957 Aspen Music Festival and School in Colorado. That was
followed by an apprenticeship at a theater in Cleveland where he
made his professional debut.
(Reporting and writing by Will Dunham; additional reporting by Piya
Sinha-Roy; Editing by Bill Trott and Tom Brown)
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