Current:Home > ContactJames Sikking, star of ‘Hill Street Blues’ and ‘Doogie Howser, MD,’ dies at 90 -VitalEdge Finance Pro
James Sikking, star of ‘Hill Street Blues’ and ‘Doogie Howser, MD,’ dies at 90
View
Date:2025-04-15 10:49:40
James Sikking, who starred as a hardened police lieutenant on “Hill Street Blues” and as the titular character’s kindhearted dad on “Doogie Howser, M.D.,” has died at 90.
Sikking died of complications from dementia, his publicist Cynthia Snyder said in a statement Sunday evening.
Born the youngest of five children on March 5, 1934 in Los Angeles, his early acting ventures included an uncredited part in Roger Corman’s “Five Guns West” and a bit role in an episode of “Perry Mason.” He also secured guest spots in a litany of popular 1970s television series, from the action-packed “Mission: Impossible,” “M.A.S.H.” “The F.B.I.,” “The Rockford Files,” “Hawaii Five-O” and “Charlie’s Angels” to “Eight is Enough” and “Little House on the Prairie.”
“Hill Street Blues” would debut in 1981, a fresh take on the traditional police procedural. Sikking played Lt. Howard Hunter, a clean-cut Vietnam War veteran who headed the Emergency Action Team of the Metropolitan Police Department in a never-named city.
The acclaimed show was a drama, but Sikking’s character’s uptight nature and quirks were often used to comic effect. Sikking based his performance on a drill instructor he’d had at basic training when military service cut through his time at the University of California, Los Angeles, from which he graduated in 1959.
“The drill instructor looked like he had steel for hair and his uniform had so much starch in it, you knew it would sit in the corner when he took it off in the barracks,” he told The Fresno Bee in 2014, when he did a series of interviews with various publications marking the box set’s release.
When it debuted on the heels of a Hollywood dual strike, the NBC show was met with low ratings and little fanfare. But the struggling network kept it on the air: “Up popped this word ‘demographic,’” Sikking told the Star Tribune in 2014. “We were reaching people with a certain education and (who) made a certain kind of money. They called it the ‘Esquire audience.’”
The show ultimately ran until 1987, although for a brief moment it wasn’t clear Sikking would make it that far. A December 1983 episode ended with his character contemplating dying by suicide. The cliffhanger drew comparisons to the “Who shot J.R.?” mystery from “Dallas” not long before — although it was quickly resolved when TV supplements accidentally ran a teaser summary that made it clear Hunter had been saved.
“I remember when Howard tried to kill himself. My brother called and asked, ‘You still got a job?’ I said, ‘Yeah,’ and he said, ‘Oh good,’ and then hung up,” Sikking told The Fresno Bee.
Sikking would earn an Emmy nomination for outstanding supporting actor in a drama in 1984. The look and format of “Hill Street Blues” were something new to Sikking — and many in the audience, from the grimy look of the set to the multiple storylines that often kept actors working in the background, even when they didn’t have lines in the scene.
“It was a lot of hard work, but everybody loved it and that shows. When you have the people who are involved in the creation, manufacture — whatever you want to call it — who are really into it and enjoy doing it, you’re going to get a good product,” he told Parade.com in 2014. “We always had three different stories running through (each episode), which means you had to listen and you had to pay attention because everything was important.”
Aside from “Hill Street Blues,” Sikking played Captain Styles in 1984’s “Star Trek III: The Search for Spock.” He wasn’t enthusiastic about the role, but had been lured by the idea that it would take just a day on set.
“It was not my cup of tea. I was not into that kind of outer space business. I had an arrogant point of view in those days. I wanted to do real theater. I wanted to do serious shows, not something about somebody’s imagination of what outer space was going to be like,” Sikking explained to startrek.com in 2014. “So I had a silly prejudice against it, which is bizarre because I’ve probably and happily signed more this, that or the other thing of ‘Star Trek’ than I have anything of all the other work I’ve done.”
After the end of “Hill Street Blues,” he acted in nearly 100 episodes of “Dougie Howser, M.D.,” reuniting with Steven Bochco, who co-created both “Hill Street Blues” and the Neil Patrick Harris-starring sitcom.
He married Florine Caplan, with whom he had two children and four grandchildren.
Sikking had all but retired by the time the box set of “Hill Street Blues” came out. He had fewer but memorable roles after the turn of the millennium, guest-starring on “Curb Your Enthusiasm” and acting in the rom-com films “Fever Pitch” and “Made of Honor.” His last roles were as a guest star on a 2012 episode of “The Closer” and in a movie that same year, “Just an American.”
Sikking continued to do charity events. He was a longtime participant in celebrity golf tournaments and even once made it to the ribbon-cutting for a health center in an Iowa town of just 7,200 people. “Actually, I came to get something from you — air I can’t see,” Sikking told the crowd of 100 people. “Where we’re from, if it isn’t brown, we don’t know how to breathe it, The Associated Press reported in 1982.
“I probably would do something if it got me going. Acting is a license to do self-investigation. It’s a great ego trip to be an actor,” he told startrek.com in 2014. “I must say that, in the past few years in which I haven’t worked, the obscurity has been quite attractive.”
“The condiment of my life is good fortune,” he finished.
veryGood! (681)
Related
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Jurors picked for trial of man suspected of several killings in Delaware and Pennsylvania
- Olympic Gymnast Mary Lou Retton Breaks Silence on Health Battle
- Supreme Court to weigh fights over public officials blocking constituents on social media
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Australia says it won’t bid for the 2034 World Cup, Saudi Arabia likely to host
- Boston Bruins exact revenge on Florida Panthers, rally from 2-goal deficit for overtime win
- 'Heavily armed man' found dead at Colorado amusement park with multiple guns and explosives
- Video shows dog chewing cellphone battery pack, igniting fire in Oklahoma home
- Albuquerque’s annual hot air balloon fiesta continues to grow after its modest start 51 years ago
Ranking
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Rangers' Jon Gray delivers in World Series Game 3. Now we wait on medical report.
- Joseph Czuba pleads not guilty in stabbing of 6-year-old Palestinian American boy
- Surge in interest rates and a cloudier economic picture to keep Federal Reserve on sidelines
- NCAA hits former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh with suspension, show-cause for recruiting violations
- Mary Lou Retton says she’s ‘overwhelmed’ with love and support as she recovers from rare pneumonia
- Nevada man charged with threatening U.S. senator in antisemitic messages
- Biden’s Cabinet secretaries will push a divided Congress to send aid to Israel and Ukraine
Recommendation
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
Canadian workers reach deal to end strike that shut down Great Lakes shipping artery
This Is Us Star Milo Ventimiglia Marries Model Jarah Mariano
'Never saw the stop sign': Diamondbacks rue momentum-killing gaffe in World Series Game 3
Shilo Sanders' bankruptcy case reaches 'impasse' over NIL information for CU star
3 astronauts return to Earth after 6-month stay on China’s space station
Dorit Kemsley Grills Kyle Richards About Her Marriage Issues in Tense RHOBH Preview
After parents report nail in Halloween candy, Wisconsin police urge caution