Subscribe
Hellobeautiful Featured Video
CLOSE
Publicity Still Of Robert Guillaume

Source: John D. Kisch/Separate Cinema Archive / Getty

Famed actor Robert Guillaume, known for his critically acclaimed role as beloved butler “Benson,” died Tuesday at home in Los Angeles, Variety reports.

His wife, Donna Brown Guillaume, told the AP that Guillaume succumbed from complications relating to prostate cancer.

Guillaume, enjoyed a lengthy acting career appearing in many notable movies, television shows and broadway plays. In 1979 he won an Emmy for  best Supporting Actor Emmy in a comedy series for his role as  in “Soap,” where he originated the role of “Benson.”

BENSON

Source: ABC Photo Archives / Getty

His dry take as ‘Benson,’ a Black butler to a prominent white family, earned a self-titled spin-off series, leading to an Emmy win in 1985 for Best Lead Actor in a comedy series.

He also voiced the character of Rafiki in the 1994 Disney hit, “The Lion King,” which earned him a Grammy in spoken word recording. Guillaume also had several notable guest appearances on hit shows like “Good Times,” “The Jeffersons,” and “Sanford and Son.”

During the 90’s he enjoyed a re-emergence in television roles, appearing on “Sports Night,” “Saved By The Bell: The College Years,”  “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air,” and “A Different World.”

Some of his most notable movie roles in “Superbly T.N.T., “Lean On Me,” and “Big Fish.”

Guillaume was born Robert Peter Williams in St. Louis, Missouri in 1927, but changed his name after deciding on an acting career.

He’s survived by his second wife, TV producer Donna Brown Guillaume; one son (another died in 1990); and three daughters.

SOURCE: Variety

DON’T MISS:

Possible Serial Killer Targeting Black & Latino Victims Terrorizes Tampa Neighborhood

Maxine Waters Forced To State The Obvious: She Does Not Want To Assassinate Trump

For 2024’s iteration of MadameNoire and HelloBeautiful’s annual series Women to Know, we knew we wanted to celebrate the people who help make the joys of film and television possible. To create art is to create magic. This year, we spotlight Hollywood Executive’s changing the face of cinema.