Actor Tom Sizemore, known for tough-guy roles and scandal, dead at 61
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[March 04, 2023]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) -Actor Tom Sizemore, known as much for his struggles with drug
addiction and run-ins with the law as for his tough-guy roles in such
films as "Saving Private Ryan" and "Black Hawk Down," died on Friday at
age 61, said his manager, Charles Lago.
Sizemore, who was hospitalized in critical condition after suffering a
brain aneurysm on Feb. 18, died in his sleep at a hospital in Burbank,
California, Lago said in a statement on Friday.
A native of Detroit, where his mother worked for the city's ombudsman
and his father was an attorney and philosophy professor, Sizemore
attended Wayne State University and earned a graduate degree in theater
from Temple University in Philadelphia.
As an aspiring actor in New York City waiting tables and performing in
plays, Sizemore got his first break when director Oliver Stone cast him
in a bit role as Vet #1 in the 1989 anti-war film "Born on the Fourth of
July."
Additional supporting parts followed in the early 1990s, leading to a
string of higher-profile work playing hard-boiled detectives in such
films as Stone's 1994 mass murder drama "Natural Born Killers," the 1995
noir mystery "Devil in a Blue Dress" and 1995 cyberpunk thriller
"Strange Days."
He also landed prominent supporting roles as frontier gunfighter Bat
Masterson in Kevin Costner's 1994 western "Wyatt Earp," a violent
sidekick to Robert De Niro's career criminal in the 1995 ensemble heist
movie "Heat," and a paramedic with a messianic complex in Martin
Scorsese's 1999 psycho-drama "Bringing Out the Dead."
Sizemore's first major leading role came in the 1997 horror thriller
"The Relic," again playing a police detective. He was nominated for a
Golden Globe Award in 2000 as best actor in a miniseries or
made-for-television movie for his role as a mob snitch in "Witness
Protection."
But he is best remembered for playing battle-hardened soldiers in two
films - Steven Spielberg's 1998 World War Two epic "Saving Private Ryan"
Ridley Scott's 2001 portrayal of the U.S. military's ill-fated 1993 raid
in Mogadishu, Somalia, "Black Hawk Down."
On television, Sizemore won plaudits for his starring role as a police
detective in the short-lived CBS television drama "Robbery Homicide
Division." He previously had a recurring role on the ABC network's
Vietnam War drama "China Beach," playing an enlisted man who falls for
star Dana Delany's character.
Through it all, Sizemore's career was largely overshadowed by personal
upheavals stemming from his acknowledged long-time bouts with substance
abuse, which landed him in and out of jail and drug rehabilitation
treatment, and a relationship with onetime Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss.
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Actor Tom Sizemore attends the premiere
of the film "The Expendables 3" in Los Angeles August 11, 2014.
REUTERS/Phil McCarten
He was convicted in 2003 of domestic
violence against Fleiss during their stormy yearlong romance,
resulting in a six-month jail sentence.
Fleiss, who had served time in jail for running a 1990s call-girl
ring for Hollywood's rich and famous, testified that Sizemore
stubbed a cigarette out on her and once knocked her to the ground
outside his home.
Sizemore, who denied the charges but did not testify at his trial,
said in a letter to the judge that he had "permitted my personal
demons to take over my life." The actor, then 41, also wrote that he
was "convinced that if I had not been under the influence of drugs,
I would have controlled by behavior."
A separate conviction on charges of methamphetamine possession led
to court-ordered drug rehab.
In 2005 he was jailed for violating terms of his probation from the
domestic abuse and meth convictions by failing a drug urine test
when he was caught trying to use a prosthetic penis device, called a
Whizzinator, to fake the results.
Sizemore's probation was reinstated after he checked into a
psychiatric hospital for treatment of chronic depression and drug
dependency that a doctor said the actor had fought for years.
He was arrested again on suspicion of domestic abuse in 2016 and the
following year pleaded no contest, the legal equivalent of guilty in
California, and was sentenced to three year's probation.
In 2010, Sizemore parlayed his notoriety and history of addiction
into an appearance with Fleiss on the third season of the VH1's
reality show "Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew."
Sizemore chronicled his turbulent life in the 2013 memoir, "By Some
Miracle I Made It Out of There."
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Anirudh Saligrama in Bengaluru; Editing by Himani Sarkar and William
Mallard)
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