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Henry Silva, last of the original Ocean’s Eleven stars, dead at 95

On-screen crime paid off for Henry Silva, who played scores of bad guys over a long career.  <i>Photo: IMBD</i>

On-screen crime paid off for Henry Silva, who played scores of bad guys over a long career. Photo: IMBD

Hollywood is mourning the death of Henry Silva, one of its most prolific character actors, who has passed away at the age of 95.

Silva was best known for playing villains and tough guys in The Manchurian Candidate, Ocean’s Eleven and other films.

Silva’s son Scott Silva told Variety his father died on Wednesday of natural causes at the Motion Picture and Television Country House and Hospital in Woodland Hills, California.

Silva was a New York City native who dropped out of school as a teenager, in the 1940s.

He was accepted the following decade into the Actors Studio, where fellow students included Shelley Winters and Ben Gazzara, and went on to enjoy a long and busy career in film and television, with hundreds of credits before retiring from acting in 2001.

He had a breakthrough role on stage and screen in the 1950s as a drug dealer in A Hatful of Rain and supporting parts in two of Frank Sinatra’s best known movies, both from the early 1960s: Ocean’s Eleven, the Las Vegas heist film that was a showcase for Sinatra, Dean Martin and other Rat Pack members; and The Manchurian Candidate, the Cold War thriller about brainwashing and the assassination of the president that starred Sinatra, Laurence Harvey and Janet Leigh.

In his last film appearance, Silva was cast in the Ocean’s Eleven remake from 2000 that starred George Clooney and Brad Pitt.

“Our hearts are broken at the loss of our dear friend Henry Silva, one of the nicest, kindest and most talented men I’ve had the pleasure of calling my friend,” Dean Martin’s daughter, Deana Martin, tweeted.

Silva was also seen on such television series as Wagon Train and The F.B.I., and in such films as Warren Beatty’s Dick Tracy, Jerry Lewis’ Cinderfella and Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai, in which he played a mobster in the 1999 release directed by one of his admirers, Jim Jarmusch.

-with AAP

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