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Kara Kovalchik
6 Shocking TV Deaths
by Kara Kovalchik - April 9, 2009 - 4:11 PM

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kal-penn.jpgI’m hoping that everyone who TiVoed last Monday’s episode of House has already watched it, since the next sentence definitely contains a spoiler. The suicide of Dr. Kutner broadsided viewers, although in retrospect it wasn’t so surprising. Actor Kal Penn had been fairly underused during the two years he was on the show, and he recently revealed that he’d accepted the position of “liaison connecting the Obama administration with arts and entertainment groups, as well as with the Asian-American and Pacific Islander communities.” Since he was poised to leave the show anyway, one can postulate that the producers decided that a dramatic, unexpected exit (suicide) could make for a Very Special Episode, and maybe even an Emmy nomination.

Kutner’s shocking departure got me to thinking about other surprising TV deaths, particularly those that occurred in the days before the Internet was prevalent and one studio mole could leak sensitive script information to the whole world within minutes.

1. Henry Blake (M*A*S*H)

mclean.jpgThe most obvious candidate in this category is M*A*S*H’s Lt. Col. Henry Blake. It was known that McLean Stevenson was leaving the series for (supposedly) greener pastures, but not everyone on the show knew the producers killed his character until Gary Burghoff (Radar) walked into the OR and announced that Blake’s plane had been shot down over the Sea of Japan. Alan Alda was the only cast member who’d been given a copy of the final script in advance; Larry Gelbart had kept the last page locked in his desk until the very last minute, so the reactions from Radar and the rest of the cast were genuine. In fact, the emotions were so genuine that the “end of season” wrap party was cancelled because no one was in a celebratory mood.

2. Dan Conner (Roseanne)

dan-conner.jpgEven the staunchest Roseanne fans hated the series’ over-the-top final season – the one where the Conners won the lottery and Jackie was courted by a prince while “Roseambo” battled terrorists. There was a moment in the series finale, however, that did manage to evoke some genuine emotion. As the camera honed in on each cast member, Roseanne’s voiceover told their “true” story. When the camera focused on Dan, it panned away for a moment and then turned back and his chair was empty. Roseanne then revealed that Dan had actually died after the heart attack he’d suffered at Darlene’s wedding. Most of Roseanne’s stream-of-consciousness ramblings during this segment strained the imagination, but the vacant seat and the echoing sound of Dan’s voice calling “Rosey?” was a sudden, harsh slap of reality – that big loveable lug – Roseanne’s “rock” – was gone forever.

3. Dennis Gant (ER)

Usually the death of a tertiary character doesn’t garner much sympathy from me (how many times has a lead character met, fell in love with, and then lost their intended via some bizarre accident all within the span of a few episodes?) But Omar Epps (who currently plays Dr. Eric Foreman on House) managed to hit us all in the gut with his dramatic exit on ER, even though he’d only been present for 10 episodes. During that time, however, it was made clear that as a surgical intern he was constantly bullied and belittled by Dr. Benton (Eriq LaSalle), whose philosophy was that black doctors had to set the bar higher in order to be taken seriously. In the “Night Shift” episode, Gant was clearly troubled and left the hospital in the middle of his shift. Later in the night, EMS brought in a horribly battered patient who’d been hit by an EL train. Witnesses were divided as to whether he’d jumped or stumbled. As the staff started lifesaving procedures, Benton barked out the order to page Dr. Gant. A nurse dialed the telephone, and suddenly the beeper clipped on the belt of their patient started chirping…

4. Maude Flanders (The Simpsons)

280px-Maude_Flanders.JPGWho would’ve pre-ditilly-dicted that the chaste, saintly Maude Flanders would’ve met a gruesome death right on the air? In front of kids and everyone? Sadly, Maude had the misfortune of returning from the refreshment stand at the Springfield Speedway with her hands full of hot dogs just at the moment when Homer Simpson had painted a target on his tummy for the cheerleaders who were using a T-shirt cannon. Poor Maude plunged to her death after a volley of high-velocity tees knocked her off the grandstand. Oddly enough, the management of Lowe’s Speedway in North Carolina felt that this episode cut too close to the bone, as an incident of flying tires in 1999 actually caused the deaths of three spectators, so the local Fox affiliate refused to show any commercials promoting that particular episode.

5. Rosalind Shays (L.A. Law)

shays.jpgDiana Muldaur joined the cast of L.A. Law in 1989 as the ruthless and ambitious attorney Rosalind Shays. Viewers loved to hate Roz; after all, she bedded the fatherly founding partner Leland McKenzie, took over as senior partner after his retirement, and eventually sued the firm for sexual discrimination. Shays exited the show with a splat, not a bang – while casually chatting with Leland in front of the elevator, the bell “dinged” and the doors opened. Roz wasn’t looking as she stepped inside, so she didn’t realize that the elevator car hadn’t arrived, and she plunged to her death down the empty shaft. Of course, modern elevators are designed to make this type of malfunction impossible, but why split hairs? It still made for a memorable exit.

6. Christine Chubbuck (Suncoast Digest)

suncoast.jpg“If it bleeds, it leads” is the rule of thumb in TV news. Christine Chubbuck, a Florida news anchor, often referred to this trend as “blood and guts TV.” She complained to her bosses whenever they cut into her public affairs program, Suncoast Digest, in order to show live footage of shoot-outs and gruesome accidents. None of Chubbuck’s co-workers knew that she’d struggled with depression for many years, so they simply thought it was a bad joke when, on the morning of July 15, 1974, eight minutes into her broadcast she calmly announced: “In keeping with Channel 40’s policy of bringing you the latest in blood and guts, and in living color, you are going to see another first — attempted suicide.” Chubbuck then pulled a revolver out from under her desk, pointed it behind her right ear and pulled the trigger.

Did you wince when Alex was literally blown in half on Third Watch? Were you expecting cancer patient Nancy to be the thirtysomething character who wouldn’t live to see forty? What TV deaths surprised, shocked and/or brought a tear to your eye?

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Comments (139)
  1. No Susan from Seinfeld? That was a TV classic for sure …

  2. I still cry every time I watch that episode of MASH :-(

  3. I was surprised when they killed Kate from NCIS. Everyone thought the shootout the team was involved with was over…then suddenly you hear a gunshot and she springs in front of Tony (I think?), taking the bullet between the eyes. She was Tony’s comedic foil on the show, and you couldn’t ignore the sexual tension between them. Everyone was hoping they would get together, when we really should have been hoping she would stay alive. So sad.
    Speaking of ER, while it was very sad when Gant fell/jumped, it was more shocking to me when the angry balding doctor (can’t remember his name; had a hand amputated, any help?) was decapitated by a helicopter blade. My mouth fell open on that one.

  4. I’m in the group that loathe the final season of Roseanne, but I did tune in for the final episode and bawled my face off when it was learned that Dan died and that’s why the storyline of the last season was wacky.

    It went out in style.

  5. While it wasn’t shocking, it was a long time coming Dr. Green’s death on ER had me in tears.

    Amber’s death on House last season was particularly heartbreaking and shocking too. I don’t think many people liked her character, but to see Wilson have to go through that was very sad for me.

  6. I second Kate’s death on NCIS. One of the most shocking moments in TV for me.

  7. I know it’s recent, but Derek Reese’s death on the recent “Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles” was amazing and shocking. No real resolution to his story (he was still on the outs with Sarah), no dramatic saving the day, no slow motion, no “beauty shot”. In the first fifteen minutes of the episode, a Terminator rounds a corner and shoots him. Bam! Dead.

    Especially on an episode that wasn’t promoted at “a shocking new episode” or “one of these people will die”, or if it was I missed it, it came out of nowhere, and renewed the whole cold, unstoppable terminator feeling.

  8. I agree with Bas about NCIS… I only watch the reruns on USA and was also shocked when Lauren Holly was killed (even though she already had a terminal disease or illness).

    I liked Kate alot but I like that Agent David can dish Tony’s shit right back at him, haha, while at the same time being feminine and it confuses him that he likes her because he’s definitely more the femme fetale type.

  9. Duh, I also meant to comment on House… I hated Amber but I hate seeing Wilson going through the grief even more. I am sad that the whole thing has destroyed the friendship between him and House.

    I only watch these in reruns on USA also so I am rather behind and don’t know if Wilson really moved away and all that… don’t tell me! ;-D

  10. Bas:

    The angry doctor on ER lost an arm by the helicopter blade but not his head. However, in an ironic twist several episodes later a medivac helicopter crashed and fell on his grumpy butt. Ahhh, the man could not win when it came to the helicopter!

    I still cry at the Henry Blake episode of MASH, too. Gets me every time!

  11. I was shocked when Carla (Benton’s ex and the mother of his son) died from a car accident. And Billy Thomas on Ally McBeal from a brain tumor.

  12. Charlie on Lost? i cried so hard even though it was already foreshadowed and expected

  13. In the UK there is a soap opera called “Emmerdale” which set in a small Yorkshire village, so it’s mainly about sheep farming.

    I didn’t watch it much as a kid, but I do remember idly flipping onto that channel one evening just in time to see Sandy, one of the younger central characters, reach into his car to get his shot gun. He grabbed the gun by the barrel then pulled it towards him, the trigger caught on something and he was shot in the head.

    The camera just pulled back from the car with his body next to it, there was the sound of birds singing in the trees and then the credits rolled in silence.

    I was probably about 11 at the time, and I was just shocked that Sandy could be killed off like that!

  14. Charlie on Lost was good…

    but I didn’t see Eko’s death coming. That one was quite a shock, actually.

  15. Bas- That was Dr. Romano.

  16. Good list, Kara! I think these fit the bill of “shocking” more so than some of the suggestions. For example, by the time Charlie died on Lost, half of the Lostees had died, so losing one more wasn’t a surprise. That being said, I did cry my eyes out when it happened :)

  17. I was pretty shocked when Francie was killed on Alias.

  18. The one that blew me away was the murder of Warrick Brown by the sheriff on CSI.

    I’d have to say one of the memorable TV character deaths would be Bobby Ewing’s on Dallas. Not because of how it happened itself, but the fact that they had to turn into a dream when Patrick Duffy wanted to come back to the show.

  19. Callie from Battlestar Galactica is the only recent one to stick in my head. I really thought she was going to get a happily-ever-after moment at the end of the series, and then…

    Of course, you could add Starbuck to the list, or any of a dozen other characters. When Ron Moore kills someone off, he does it in a very memorable way!

  20. RE GMSC

    I only saw the CSI episode where Warrick dies (and the ones leading up to it) as repeats on Spike (are we sensing a pattern here with my TV viewing, hah).

    I think I heard something about it when it aired originally but by the time I saw it (earlier this year), I was SHOCKED!!!

  21. I know she was only a minor character on a effin’ cartoon, but the death of Maude Flanders was heartbreaking!

  22. Buffy’s Mom (Joyce) on Buffy the Vampire Slayer. When she had the aneurysm, it was so poignant. Buffy couldn’t do anything protect her; the sun was shining and kids were playing outside. There was no dramatic music in the background, just the two of them. It was really well-done–I bawled my eyes out! (Yes, I was very attached to that show. Shut up!)

  23. Bas – I agree with you about NCIS and Kate. I did not expect that to happen. What happened was that the gunfight between the terrorists was over and Gibbs and Tony were helping Kate (who had jumped in front of Gibbs to take a bullet in her vest) off the floor of the roof. A few moments after she stands up, out of nowhere, she is shot between the eyes.

  24. It’s a small role, but I almost man-cried when Mark Harmon (playing a secret service agent assigned to protest Allison Janney) was shot and killed in a liquor store robbery… as he was buying her flowers!

    I’ve always had a man-crush on Mark Harmon, though.

  25. If memory serves correctly Eddie Labec, Carla’s second husband on Cheers, was run over by a Zamboni. He was playing a penguin in the Ice Capades when it happened.

  26. Not sure how many people watched Discovery Channel’s reality show, American Casino, but the death of Michael Tata during the 1st season was pretty shocking. He was prominent feature of the show as the VP of Hotel Operations. He died due to alcohol and drug overdose.

  27. JenPo, no reason to feel defensive of your love for Buffy. I think most sane people, even if they never got into the show, have some kind of respect for it (if they know anything about tv). I hope they do, anyway. The episode you are referring to, “The Body,” is a case in point. There was nothing supernatural about it. Just a group of people dealing with the shock and pain of a sudden death. Anyone who loves his or her mother would be moved by that episode.

  28. Another shocking TV death: Chuckles the Clown.

    ;)

  29. By the by, using a title like “6 Shocking TV Deaths” and then immediately following it up with a picture of an actor whose character just died, did in fact spoil the ending for this “House” fan who has not yet seen the episode and was able to put two and two together.

  30. Mr. Eko’s death on Lost killed me. I started watching the DVDs this summer and he was my favorite character. I figured since he survived longer than Ana Lucia and Libby (who I also liked) that he would stick around.

    I was so mad at Lost for taking one of the great characters. Plus I loved his prayer stick.

  31. It goes back a long way, but how about Edith Bunker?

  32. I was pretty shocked when Hilde’s boyfriend Santos was killed during an armed robbery on Ugly Betty. Despite imperfections, he was just coming into his own as a partner and father figure for Hilde and Justin, as well as becoming an extremely likable character. What made this death even worse, is the first episode of the next season flirted with the idea that he was still alive. Alas, it was all fantasy and denial on Hilde’s part, and the pain of his death was made all the more crushing for the viewer. THE best episode of Ugly Better ever.

  33. The most shocking for me are from “24″. First and foremost was Jack’s wife at the end of season 1, then when ex-president Palmer was shot in the first episode of season 5. TOTALLY didn’t see either of those coming.

  34. Very good call on Dr. Gant from ER. I was not even a fan of the show and still am not but I watched that episode with my girlfriend and I remember it vividly. Well done.

  35. TVGuide.com had a great article listing some of the most memorable character deaths on TV. Here’s a few I’d like to contribute:

    - Cherry on China Beach; who’dve thunk the innocent candy striper would buy it?

    - Sam Beckett on Quantum Leap; what’s even more poignant is that outside of Sam never going home, we don’t know exactly what happened to him.

    - Mr. Hooper on Sesame Street; even though I was all of six years old when this episode aired, I can still remember it.

  36. I agree about Buffy’s mom — but the one that got me, even more than that, was Tara. Things had finally gotten good between the two of them again, and her absolutely meaningless death was so horrifying to me.

  37. 1. Tara on Buffy the Vampire Slayer! Just as unexpected as Buffy’s mom.
    2. In the Hill Street Blues pilot, Renko (and maybe Hill?) were gunned down. It was shocking. When the series was signed up, it was decided to have them recover and they were made permanent cast members.
    3. Same thing with Nurse Hathaway on the ER pilot. She was to have died of a deliberate overdose over her on-again, off-again romance with George Clooney’s character, but when the series was signed up, they decided to have her recover.
    4. Kyle Chandler’s character’s death on Grey’s Anatomy was very upsetting, although he was not a regular cast member. Thank goodness he moved to Friday Night Lights or I’d have had to see a grief counselor.
    5. The young female doctor who was attacked with John Carter on ER – that was not only a real shocker, but an astonishingly well-made episode. It still haunts many people today. You didn’t even know she’d been hurt until he saw her from his vantage point, lying on the floor.

    Nancy’s non-death on Thirty Something was totally arbitrary. The writers decided to play to the audience and kill off another cast member instead, even though it made no medical sense. Nobody recovers from terminal ovarian cancer. I found her so annoying that I wished they had let her go, except that then she’d be a martyr.

  38. Mr. Eko was killed off because the actor portraying him did not like living in Hawaii.

  39. According to Snopes, the cast did know that Henry Blake would die before the final scene, just not very long beforehand.

  40. Claire Kinkaid on Law and Order. It just seemed so senseless at the time.

  41. From the very beginning the writers on Lost cautioned us not to get too close to the characters, as there would be deaths among the castaways. Still, Charlie’s death was shocking not because we didn’t see it coming (though Des sure did for almost the whole season)–it was more shocking for me that they actually went through with it–the killing of an original Lostie.

    I cried my eyes out during both “Greatest Hits” (when he finds out that he must die in order to save Claire, Aaron and the rest of the survivors; when he’s writing his love letter to Claire throughout; and his scene in the canoe with Des) and the actual death in “Through the Looking Glass.” Great acting by Dominic Monaghan that should have gotten some award recognition from the Emmy people.

  42. Mrs. Landingham, the president’s secretary on West Wing. I did NOT see that one coming… she had just bought her first new car, and then got hit by a drunk driver! That episode of WW was jaw-droppingly awesome.

  43. I was shocked when ADA Claire Kincaid was killed by a drunk driver in Law & Order. I was equally surprised when another ADA, Alexandra Borgia, was brutally killed several seasons later. And there was also the murder of Sgt. Max Greevey in the very first episode of season 2!

    I

  44. A lot people say Charlie dying on Lost, but they foreshadowed that a lot w/ Desmond. I was more shocked by Shannon (Maggie Grace) getting shot as 2 groups of friendly Lostaways stumbled into each other in the jungle.

    Also, loved the ep The Body on Buffy, but I could never watch it again (in synd.), way too depressing.

    Derek Reese dying was another huge shocker.

    I was glad Callie got offed on BSG, but I thought Billy dying was more of a shocker.

    One of my faves from the way back was on Magnum PI, Magnum’s ex-wife Michelle, as well as his presumptive daughter Lily, were blown-up in a car and a videotape (ahh, how quaint) of it was sent to Magnum. It was called back to several times in the last few yrs, and it never got any easier, although Lily did survive, and led to TM learning she was his daughter.

  45. I have to add Kaffey(?) on Hill St Blues. he was buying cigars for a poker game and walked into a robbery. Also Tim Speedle (Speed) on CSI Miami How about when Popeye shot Shorty in “Happy Birthdaze”??

  46. Nate on Six Feet Under? That one really tore me up.

    Noelle-
    Have you been living under a rock for the past week? I don’t even watch the show, but I’ve heard dozens of people talking about it. Also, didn’t you hear about Kal Penn accepting that position in the Obama administration? The stories were reported together. Come on.

  47. Wow… thanks *ever so* for putting the recent House spoiler in the sentence directly after and in the same paragraph where you mention there is, in fact, a spoiler. Your choice of placement made it extremely difficult to avoid reading.

    Some of us hadn’t actually had a chance to watch the episode from *two* days ago yet so, if I haven’t made it obvious already, I really appreciate you spoiling it for me. (Not that it wasn’t totally obvious with the picture you chose for the article, that was a poor decision, too.)

    Maybe something a little less recent next time? (Or even further down the page without the picture of the well-known character… anything?)

  48. Great article, but I have to agree with Noelle, there had to be a better way to spoiler alert..

    Buffy’s mom was the one that had me in tears, and I still have to skip that episode when I re-watch.

    Hilly – actually, yes. Some of us only watch TV once a week, and TiVo is my friend.

  49. @ Mrs. Landingham, indeed. I cried so hard for her.

    @ hilly-
    Seriously? Don’t be a brat. Regardless of whether or not she heard the stories it was a poor choice of image and content placement for the article.

    And personally? I don’t think she’s out of line for a second for being irritated that a show she enjoyed was spoiled for her (and me) because the author decided to put the sentence warning about the spoiler and the sentence with the spoiler in it right next to each other, along with the character who died all together at the top of the page.

    It was unavoidable conclusion if you have half a brain.

    Have a nice day.

  50. if you really care about a tv show and the characters, you would have already known i think.

    i miss him already, next episode is gonna be so weird.

  51. omg i think when alex died on 3rd watch i simultaneously started crying,threw up,and crapped myself lol.that was so dramatic!

  52. The one that still makes me sob is Gus McRae in Lonesome Dove. And then Call takes his body back to Texas to be buried in the spot where Gus & Clara used to picnic (sigh)…

  53. No Mrs. Landingham on “The West Wing”? (Thank you leigh for posting that one in the comments.)
    Then Laverne on “Scrubs”. Her death made even more poignant by the fact that she had just said “everything is god’s plan.” Of course the actress returned as a different character which tamped down the depression, but still.
    I would also add Issace Mendez from “Heroes”. He was only in 16 episodes but since the entire first season plotline (the best plotline) revolved around his predictive paintings, and his character was built up so much and so well that his death by Silar’s hands left me surprised.
    Chef’s death on “South Park” after his brain washing at the hands of a child-molesting adventure cult. Enough said.
    Grant Imehara’s death on “Mythbusters too…oh wait…that didn’t happen… yet.

    Anyway there are plenty of surprising on-screen deaths. And i don’t foresee an emmy win (possible nomination) for Kal Penn seeing as how he wasnt even in the episode in which he dies.

  54. Simon Donovan on the West Wing – CJ’s secret service love interest.

    Probably the first character death I’d ever seen on TV. Still chokes me up.

    And Leo, but I think we all heard about the actor’s death long before the character’s.

  55. How about one from a cartoon? The character Dinobot from the Beast Wars: Transformers was pretty shocking and unexpected since it’s not what you normally find in a “kids” show.

  56. I think Lucy’s death on ER – season 3? Early on in the series anyhow, was way more shocking and emotional than Gant’s. That was the episode where the schizophrenic patient stabbed Lucy and Carter and no one found them until the very end of the show.

    Oh – and Carnival (the HBO series) when the girl is raped and murdered in Babylon and her ghost watches everyone pack up and leave…ewwww!!!!

  57. I’ve got a couple here… How about the final episode of The Wonder Years where Kevin Arnold (similar to the Roseanne episode) told the fates of his family and friends. Not only did he and Winnie NOT get together, but his father, Jack, the hardnosed rock of the family, passed away from a heart attack 7 years later. It didn’t happen on-screen, but as an eleven year old kid, that always stuck with me.

    Also, how about John Evans, that patriarch of Good Times? It was before my time, but I just caught this on TV Land this week, and if not accidentally coming across the info on the IMDB, would have been TOTALLY shocked. My wife was, and was in tears by the end of the episode.

  58. Guys and gals–I just watched it for the first time via Netflix. Rescue Me’s Chief! Had no idea he was going to kill himself.

    Buffy’s mom–CLASSIC episode. No music score at all for the entire episode. Well done!

  59. Does the Christine Chubbuck thing really belong on this list? Really? She was an actual real-life person. And I can’t believe you ranked her death below a cartoon characters. I’m sorry, but thats just messed up.

  60. Strangly, I was informed about the upcoming death of Maude Flanders two or three years before it happened. My Soc. Studies teacher at the time was a big Simpsons fan and had heard that the producers were going to fire the voice actress that did Maude’s voice due to contracts disputes.

  61. Rescue Me-Tommy Gavin’s brother Johnny getting shot on a stakeout. I started crying when they showed the funeral.

  62. The one that stuck out the most for me was Dualla from Battlestar Galactica. Of all the deaths on BSG, it was the most random, most unexpected. When I saw it, I actually thought it was part of a weird sequence or projection. Dee’s death was the most shocking in all of BSG, IMHO. (Even more than Starbuck, because I knew she had to be coming back.)

    As for the L&O deaths, Borgia’s death was FAR more shocking than Kinkaid’s. People die at the hands of drunk drivers all the time (Nick Adenhart most recently) yet not a lot of people end up suffocated in trunks.

    Recaptcha: GLOOM Forest

  63. I agree with so many of these comments, but I do think ‘Rescue Me’ does it best…Johnny Gavin, Connor Gavin, the Chief.

  64. firstly, i love that this is not only a list of memorable TV deaths, but also a great spoilers list.

    i cried for a while when buffy’s mom died, and i still don’t like to watch that episode. also, i was bummed out by boone and charlie’s deaths on LOST. and i cried again when they replayed charlie’s death at the beginning of the next season – i was really hoping it was going to be a “just kidding! he’s really ok after all!”. but it wasn’t. :(
    but i think the absolute worst to watch was dr greene. it doesn’t help that the last time i saw it in reruns i was watching it with my roommate who was not yet diagnosed with the mono that she had at the time, adn spent the whole hour crying about having a tumor in her brain and that she was going to die.

  65. i take that back about dr greene, while that was super sad i just remembered the most upsetting deaths/final episode ever. Six Feet Under.

  66. Brenden Fraiser’s character, Ben Sullivan, on Scrubs. Even though he was only on for a few episodes, he was such a great guy I got choked up when they revealed his death.

  67. Regarding cartoon deaths – years before Dinobot’s in Transformers: Beast Wars, Roy Fokker way back in Robotech: The Macross Saga was shocking for this then eleven-year-old that saw it. Considering how people would bail out of their vehicles when they were shot down in G.I. Joe, this was a new one.

    Of course, the granddaddy of cartoon deaths had to be Optimus Prime in Transformers: The Movie.

  68. He wasn’t a main character, but I loved Ben on Scrubs, played by Brenden Fraser. I hadn’t caught the clues and was totally shocked at the end of the episode.

    Lucy on ER broke my heart. The scene where Carter sees her dying under the bed was very difficult to watch, even more so when Bensen told him she had died.

  69. The Lost death that shocked me the most was Ben’s daughter Alex. (The deaths of her mom Rousseau and her boyfriend Karl just an episode or two earlier came out of nowhere as well.)

    When there’s a gun to someone’s head on television for a prolonged time, nobody pulls the trigger. It was the first time on Lost something didn’t go as Ben planned. (Terrific acting by Michael Emerson in that scene by the way.)

  70. As another commenter mentioned, according to Snopes, the cast of M*A*S*H DID know ahead of time about the death of Col Blake. Click on my name to see the article.

  71. The two already mentioned from West Wing were really spectacular- I felt SO bad for CJ after that episode.

    The one that really got me though was Amber on House. My fiance and I are huge fans of the show and we couldn’t get the episode out of our head for a few hours. Talk about holding your loved ones tight.

    BTW-I’m totally with those of you who are complaining about the picture of Kal Penn, but in fairness I did see several articles about his new real-life position on cnn.com and news.yahoo.com shortly after the episode aired.

  72. Actually bas, Kate dies when a terrorist sniper its her between the eyes after a shootout. It left room for Ziva David to come in and in my opinion she’s an even better counter to Tony. I was iffy about her but I still cry at that episode.

    I was really surprised when they killed off Jenny Shepard from the show. She was Gibbs’ conscience in many cases and was one of the few really great leaders as far as TV bosses go.

    You scared me a little with the Grant Imehara joke, Jake. Meanie :P

  73. Mine is from a show I bet hardly anyone remembers. Beauty and the Beast, 1987. It ran for three seasons. Linda Hamilton (Sarah Connor of Terminator) played Cathy Chandler (Beauty) and Ron Perlman (Hellboy) played Vincent (the Beast). I certainly did not expect them to kill off Cathy’s character in the first episode of season 3!! That was a bizarre episode.

  74. How about The Wire? Clearly there were tons of deaths, but when Stringer went down, I was so angry.

  75. Speaking of cartoon deaths, and I think maybe the first non-human death mentioned on here, I nearly cried at the end of the “Jurassic Bark” episode of Futurama when Fry’s faithful dog lays down and dies waiting for him outside the pizzaria.

  76. I agree with Ben, although I actually did cry when he died

  77. I agree with whoever said Kate/the Director on NCIS…

  78. The Korean baby on the last episode of MASH.

  79. who could forget nathan in six feet under?!!
    i lied to my girlfried that i didn’t cry for that.
    my god.

  80. @Mario — Young Nate or old Nate?

  81. Season 9 premiere of CSI. I think you guys knew who died: CSI Warrick Brown, shot by a–hole McKeen.

    Poor guy. But I did hear Gary Dourdan had a bit of problem with the producers.

    Still, poor Warrick. He was my fave CSI!

  82. All good picks so far, but my pick has to be Omar from The Wire. Never saw that coming!

  83. how about an article about celebrities who died mid-series and had to be written out of a show? i kept waiting for someone to say john ritter on 8 simple rules, or phil hartman on news radio, or that guy from suddenly susan. those were certainly shocking.

    oh, and a kind of predictable, but still a pretty surprising one was the mother of tom’s child on desperate housewives (killed by jackie from roseanne).

  84. how about claire kincaid on law and order? i was so stunned. i still can’t watch that episode – when lenny (jerry orbach) gets out of the car and realizes that she’s dead, the look on his face just breaks my heart.

  85. The Sopranos had some memorable deaths too. Adriana’s murder and Bobby Baccalieri’s murder were shocking. Adriana had been circling the drain for a while as an informant. You knew that wasnt going to end well. Bobby was the “sensitive” gangster who you believed had some kindness in him. Seeing him shot about 20 times was hard

  86. Vanessa Ferlito’s character on CSI:NY. Her character had already been kicked from the forensic team for considering tampering with evidence and figured that could be the end of it.. so I was completely shocked when she turned up dead.

  87. Yeah. You spoiled House for me as well. I had heard there was a death, but I always watch the episode when it comes online a week later. I had successfully avoided hearing who it was until it was on the front page of my favorite website-MENTAL FLOSS! All I saw was the picture for a split second and boom. Over. It made our relationship strained, Mental Floss. It did.

    But I bawled when Amber on House died-less for Amber, more for Wilson and House.

    When Buffy’s mom died I was SHOCKED! It was even more shocking because of the absolutely normal way she died. No monsters, no demons, just an aneurysm.

  88. That episode of MASH kills me every time. Even though I know how it’s going to end now!

    What about Denny from Grey’s Anatomy? He survived the surgery, got his heart, Izzy’s coming up the elevator and BAM! No more Denny.

    Oh, and Dawson’s dad on Dawson’s Creek.

  89. I have to agree with C.J. it is weird that you end your list with a real person so did in fact commit suicide on-air (as opposed to TV CHARACTERS which aren’t real). It’s just an odd choice.

  90. I’m inclined to agree with hilly and karina…it’s understandable that you tivo and then watch later, sure, but the news about Kal Penn working for Obama was a huge story on most major news sites/ channels, etc. It’s just surprising that everyone hadn’t heard about it. I am sorry, though, that it was spoiled for you.

  91. Anyone here ever watch Australian TV show Love my Way? The death of the main character’s daughter in that was heartbreaking, and very well acted. Touching and sad without being over the top…

  92. I agree with the Futurama “Jurassic Bark” episode. I am not much of a dog person, but that sequence got me depressed for a week.

    Also, the death of Mayor Howard Buss from the TV show Picket Fences was very shocking, and his funeral service where all of the citizens of Rome knocked on his casket is one of the best and saddest funeral scenes on the small screen.

  93. Alex Borgia on Law & Order really shocked me. What a shitty way to go…

    Futurama episodes “The Sting” (Fry “dies” while saving Leela) and “Jurassic Bark” (Seymour) made me very, very sad. Oh, and Kif in The Beast With a Billion Backs, right after he and Amy got married. He got brought back, but still… The episode where Fry goes looking for his seven-leaf clover, though not really involving character death, was very sad. I thought that how Yancy dealt with Fry’s disappearance (in sharp contrast to their parents’ nonchalance) was very touching.

    Tosh from Torchwood. She was my favorite. And Donna from Doctor Who may as well be dead. Poor girls.

    Roseanne’s monologue at the end of the series is my favorite part of the whole thing, especially when she says that Dan died of his heart attack.

  94. How about Christopher in the last season of the Sopranos? On a show with that many deaths it takes a big one to really move you, and that was the one.

  95. Warrick Brown- CSI- did not see that coming….

    AND I have to give a big thumbs up to the special effects team- that hole in his neck was waaaaaay too real. The whole scene was freaky.

  96. Sheriff Lamb on Veronica Mars … I hated the guy for two seasons, then was totally wrecked (and shocked) when he died.

  97. everyone forgetting the lawyer on Chicago Hope?

  98. Already mentioned:
    Nate Fisher, Six Feet Under
    Conor Gavin, Rescue Me
    Lucy Knight, ER

    Also:
    Steve Crosetti, Homicide: Life on the Street. Goes missing and turns up dead, no explanation, just like Kutner.

    Larry Moss, 24: Just happened recently, and this was only his first season, but I was stunned when Tony suffocated him after he was shot. They had really built up his character and I thought he would be around in seasons to come.

  99. What about Coach (Nicholas Colasanto) on “Cheers”?

  100. Claire Kincaid on Law and Order. When I saw it, it was a time when I was working nights and saw the reruns everyday on A&E. So being engrossed with it everyday her death was a real slap.

  101. When I was about 4 or 5 years old I remember my parents being so shocked when Mrs. Huffnagel was killed by a motorized adjustable bed on “St. Elsewhere”.

  102. Did anyone see the episode of scrubs My Last Words? George was only in one episode and you knew he was going to die but it was still so sad when he did. I almost cried the second time I watched it.

  103. How about Laverne & Shirley, Laverne’s fireman boyfriend was about to propose when he had to respond to a call and got killed.

  104. What about Nate on Six Feet Under? Gotta love a show that has the balls to kill off the protagonist three episodes before the end.

  105. First season of the Highlander tv series, when Duncan McLeod’s girlfriend is shot and killed on the street during a robbery, AFTER McLeod had rescued her from the episode’s villain and had sent her outside to be safe while he finished the villain off.

    Oh I am a geek.

  106. How about the racist old lady that choked on Buster’s thumb on Arrested Development.

  107. I had no idea you were a House fan! I am a House FANATIC – Hugh Laurie can perform a pelvic on me any day! Wait, he’s not a gyne….
    LOVE your TV Holic series! Keep up the good work!

  108. Todd Styles (David Strickland) from Suddenly Susan.
    Chico Rodriguez (Freddie Prinze) from Chico and the Man.
    Tragic loss both on and off camera.

  109. John Ritter – Rules for Dating my daughter (or whatever that series was). Shocking death to begin with.

  110. BJ, Tony and Bobbie Jones’s daughter on General Hospital. The very memory of that story still brings tears to my eyes and it was years ago. A small child, BJ just went off to school one day, and the bus crashed. She died. No one saw that coming. Like life, it was a surprise. No one planned for it, no long goodbyes, no drawn out storyline. It hit the viewers like me in the pit of our stomachs.

  111. I was a huge Commish fan (I know, remember that one?), and when Stan (loved him!) got in his car and it exploded I was heartbroken!

  112. I remember that episode of The Commish (great show, btw!)… Stan had just been promoted, and was on his way to tell his dad when the car bomb went off.

    On a related note, Michael DeLorenzo’s character in New York Undercover also was killed by a car bomb during one of their season finales.

  113. On the Shield, lots of people got offed, but I think the most shocking one was the way Lem went out. Then in the final episode, even though it was kind of foreshadowed, when they found what Shane did to his wife and kid my heart dropped.

    Add Mr Hooper from Sesame Street, and Dr Weaver’s lover from ER to the ones that really got me.

  114. Marissa on the O.C. still gets me every time. I sobbed in the shower the night I saw it happen.

  115. I think 24 has the most surprising deaths. Jack’s wife, Teri, the first season – who would have guessed? Michelle is exposed to a deadly virus and dies. Tony is killed off only to be brought back several seasons later. Larry Moss killed by Tony this season was shocking. I keep waiting for Jack’s daughter, Kim, to be killed. She runs into more psychos than he does!

  116. The death of Tasha Yar in the first season of Star Trek the Next Generation was a major eye-opener compared to the usual “red shirts” of the original.

    Random selection and no motive other than the antagonist’s desire to show it could kill.

  117. Carnivale (HBO) had a lot of death, but I agree about the Babylon episode. What made me sad was when they were packing up and moving on, the girl’s mother dumped the basin of water used to wash the body. They focused on the blood spilled on he ground for a couple of beats. It said a thousand words.
    I sure miss that show. When they canceled Carnivale and Deadwood in rapid succession, I canceled my subscription.

  118. A few geeky shows made it in the comments, but for me I cried my eyes out when Dr. Janet Fraiser died on Stargate SG-1.

  119. Absolutely need to have Mr. Hooper on this list. When Big Bird said, “He’s… not coming back?” I mean, I’m crying thinking of it now.

  120. Wash in Serenity [okay, it was a film but did follow from Firefly] and Cordelia in Angel, so unexpected and sad.

  121. Nothing from NYPD Blue? Andy’s son? Andy’s wife? Simone? Sorenson? The list goes on and on.

    I think his son’s death was the most heart-wrenching, although his wife’s last words were pretty sad… “take care of the baby.”

  122. All the love for Buffy’s mom, and no mention of Jenny Calendar? That one shocked the hell out of my wife and I. Characters with that much screen time and plot involvement just *didn’t* die that easily. They died in season finales, or sweeps week, with big build-ups. The sudden and almost casual death really set the tone that this was a different kind of show with very different rules.

  123. Captain John Sheridan’s death in the last episode of Babylon 5, “Sleeping In Light”. I watched it with twelve friends when it first aired, and the room was silent for ten minutes after the end of the episode — followed by one of my friends saying softly, “And that, your Honor, is why I had to kill Mr Straczynski.”

    Two other divergent deaths from Babylon 5, though they both followed a path of self-sacrifice to save another. Marcus Cole and Neroon of the Mimbari.

    And the death of Londo Mollari, from the same series. Rarely does it hurt that much to see someone who deserves it THAT MUCH get killed.

  124. “The Shield” had some INCREDIBLY shocking and even disturbing deaths. First off, when Shane killed Lem… I couldn’t even speak. I was so shocked that I just sat there with crying my mouth hanging open. Then in the series finale when Shane kills his wife and son then kills himself… I mean, we all had a feeling he would off himself, but his pregnant wife and young son? Shocking.

    I gotta bring up “24″ just because of the sheer number of deaths that were shocking. President Palmer for one. And why hasn’t someone mentioned Edgar yet? That scene where he looked at Chloe before he died was SO sad. And when Tony “died”, that really hit me hard since he was my favorite.

    “Lost” has shocked me, but I’m surprised by the number of people who mentioned Charlie. We all knew it was going to go down, even if was sad all the same. Ana Lucia’s and Libby’s deaths were more shocking in my opinion. But I’d love to see Kate get killed. Anyone else agree?

  125. Joyce and Tara in BtVS.

    Their deaths were unexpected….

  126. People still watch Lost?

  127. Anybody else remember James Garner’s series Nichols? As a kid it just never occurred to me they could kill off the hero…. of course, they did re-introduce Garner as his identical twin brother later that epidode. :-)

  128. Lucy’s face…when John Cartwer fell still haunts me. I think the stabber guy is now the genious guy on “Numbers”

  129. i was 18 when the mash episode aired and i was babysitting that night. i sat and cried my eyes out. but another tv death that had a major impact on me was when real life actor john ritter died. the circumstances surrounding the tv character he played were eerily similiar to my situation. when i was 15, my mother received a phone call just like john’s tv wife, went to the hospital and was told her husband was dead. there were two girls and a boy, the same as my family. it just hit me so hard.

  130. Sinthe: not a Torchwood fan, but I was a bit shocked to hear Tosh had been killed off. Donna, however, I disagree on – she can still come back (and I’ve heard rumors about her coming back for the Christmas/New Year specials). Although my sister and I were crushed about that. We liked Donna quite a bit (the pantomine in “Partners In Crime” just set the stage for the rest of a great series).

    Alex: I totally agree, I had heard she’d died (I didn’t watch it until several months after it had aired) but I didn’t know the circumstances. When Janet was killed I sat there and bawled. They never satisfactorily covered what happened to Cassie, either.

    Shocking deaths for me…

    – Daniel Jackson on “Stargate: SG-1″ (okay, I know he died pretty often, but I’m talking about “Meridian,” when he died of radiation poisoning and ascended and no one knew if he was going to be back or not)

    – Jadzia Dax on “Star Trek: Deep Space Nine” – one minute things are fine, she’s happy, the next minute Dukat appears and shoots her, and then she’s in the infirmary and she dies.

    I also agree with all the people about “NCIS” – the first episode I ever saw was “Kill Ari” so I knew Kate died, but it wasn’t until a couple years later I actually became a fan of the show. I watched it from the beginning to the most recent episode, and Kate’s death really shocked me – I’d been preparing myself for it, but when it actually came – WOW. There she is, joking with Tony and Gibbs, and then she’s dead. Jenny’s death got me too – you knew something was wrong with her, so you were expecting something to happen, but a firefight in Nevada? But for me, one of the most surprising was Agent Lee’s.

  131. Did i miss a mention Torchwood’s Ianto?

    Still haven’t forgiven Russell T. Davies for that one. No rhyme nor reason in it.

    After Tosh and Owen, I should have known to watch out for that kind of thing.

  132. Jeez, I cried just reading this and remembering the final episode of Roseanne. How pathetic is that?

  133. Not sudden but shocking, the death of Edith Bunker on “All in the Family”

  134. Losing Jim Henson was hard, being a muppet and sesame street fan.
    Clifford the big red dog was never the same without John Ritter.
    Video game note: Aerith from FFVII, still gets me..

  135. Maude Flanders death was a shock I never expected the Simpsons creaters to kill off a character.
    Oh another cartoon death was Kevin on Family Guy that was sad to hear.

  136. Most unexpected deaths…

    Kutner on House
    Francie on Alias
    Kate on NCIS
    Col. Blake on M*A*S*H

    Ones that tore me up and made me cry…

    Kate on NCIS
    Lucy on ER
    Dawson’s dad on Dawson’s Creek
    Denny on Grey’s Anatomy
    Ben Sullivan on Scrubs
    Janet on Stargate SG-1

    I am not really a crier when it comes to TV or movies, but boy howdy, the tears just wouldn’t stop for Janet’s death (especially).

  137. My mum and I used to watch “Sisters” whenI was a kid, and I still remember when George Clooney’s character Faulkner was blown up in his car.

    And for any of my fellow Canadian readers out there, who else cried when Wheels’s parents died on Degrassi?

  138. Pegasaurus — it was indeed shocking when they killed her off, because it was so pointless. Just a random mugging, right when it seemed she was safe. Also the death of Richie Ryan at the end of Season Five. That came out of the blue, though it was more integrated with the story.

    End of Season Four, of course, they made it look like they’d killed Joe Dawson, and then made us wait until the next season to find out that he was only injured. Bastards!

    On Babylon 5, there were a number of character deaths, but the one that shocked me the most was Kosh Naranek. The Vorlon ambassador. It fit perfectly into the storyline, but JMS had gone out of his way to write it so the viewer wouldn’t expect it in the least. Including titling the episode something innocuous: “Interludes and Examinations”.

    Every character had an “exit clause” written in, so JMS could dispose of them if the actors became unavailable. The way he got rid of the telepath, Talia Winters, was pretty drastic. Quite an ugly fate, really.

    On “Doctor Who”, the death of Adric was quite a shock. The character wasn’t well liked; in many respects, this was because it hadn’t been fully developed from the beginning, leaving Matthew Waterhouse with little to work with. But smashing him into the Earth while attempting to save it was kinda harsh. In mourning, the final episode ran without the theme song over the credits (which were overlaid over a still image of his shattered badge, rather than the usual starfield).

  139. In the world of daytime soap operas, several years ago “Days of our Lives” had a series of deaths of many major cast members, one after another. These were random shootings, stabbings, etc. that ended up not being actual deaths and turning into something else, but for many of the cast members, it was bye bye. After getting the axe, several took other acting jobs and signed contracts with other shows before being revealed it was all a hoax. Interviews of the cast, found that none of them knew who would be killed off next until just before the day of shooting.

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