• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • WATCH NEWS
    • WHAT’S ON FOX
  • ABOUT
    • Meet Our Team
      • Our Journalists
      • Sales & Programming
    • Contact WSFX
      • Sales & Programming
  • Montford Point
  • Welcome Home

Fox Wilmington WSFX-TV

Wilmington, NC | Local news Weather and Sports

  • Local News
    • Unsung Heroes
      • Nominate an Unsung Hero
  • Local Weather
  • National
  • Sports
    • Carolina Panthers
    • Panthers Game Schedule
  • Politics
    • NC Voter Information
  • Health
  • Entertainment
    • What’s on TV?
  • MORE…
    • Technology
    • Science
    • Lifestyle
    • What’s Happening Wilmington

‘Maude’ star Bill Macy dead at 97

October 18, 2019 By Stephanie Nolasco

Bill Macy, the actor who made an indelible imprint on 1970s sitcoms with his portrayal on Norman Lear “Maude” of the loving if always up-for-an-argument Walter Findlay, died last night in Los Angeles. He was 97.

Macy’s death was announced by his producer and manager Matt Beckoff, writing on Facebook “My buddy Bill Macy passed away at 7:13pm tonight. He was a spitfire right up to the end. My condolences to his beautiful wife Samantha Harper Macy.”

Macy costarred in the 1972-78 All in the Family spin-off series opposite Bea Arthur, who played the outspoken liberal Maude Findlay, a cousin of Family‘s Edith Bunker.

SAM BOBRICK DIES: ‘SAVED BY THE BELL’ CREATOR WAS 87

Macy’s post-Maude credits include 1979’s Steve Martin vehicle The Jerk, 1982’s My Favorite Year, Movers & Shakers (1985), Tales from the Darkside (1986), Me, Myself and I (1992), Analyze This (1999), Surviving Christmas (2004), The Holiday (2006), and Mr. Woodcock (2007), among many others.

Bill Macy portrays Walter Findlay on the CBS television series,

Bill Macy portrays Walter Findlay on the CBS television series, “Maude.” 
(CBS via Getty Images)

Numerous TV appearances both before and after his signature Maude role include roles on Law & Order, St. Elsewhere, Chicago Hope, The Facts of Life, NYPD Blue, and My Name Is Earl. Macy appeared, along with other former sitcom stars like Jesse White and Ann Morgan Guilbert, as one of the retirees of Del Boca Vista, Florida, in episodes of Seinfeld.

RIP TAYLOR DIES: HOLLYWOOD ICON OF COMEDY AND CAMP WAS 84

Prior to Maude, Macy had made an uncredited appearance in Mel Brooks’ The Producers, co-starred opposite Art Carney and Lilly Tomlin in 1977’s feature The Late Show, and was one of the original 1969 cast members of the Off Broadway landmark Oh, Calcutta!, where he met actress Samantha Harper, whom he’d marry in 1975. She survives him.

But it was as Maude’s Walter Findlay, the owner of Findlay’s Friendly Appliances in Tuckahoe, N.Y., husband to Maude, best friend to Conrad Bain’s buffoonish Arthur and step-dad (or one of them) to Maude’s adult daughter Carol, played by Adrienne Barbeau, that Macy had his breakthrough. His catchphrase on the show – “Maude, sit!”, at which point an arguing Maude would usually shut up and sit down – was a consistent laugh-getter, a signal that Walter could be pushed only so far, much the way Edith Bunker would occasionally snap back at husband Archie.

DIAHANN CARROLL DIES: GROUNDBREAKING STAR OF TV’S ‘JULIA’ & TONY WINNER WAS 84

In a notable storyline of Maude, Walter began showing signs of alcoholism, leading to an argument with his wife that ended in a unique show of physical violence: He slapped her. Repentant, Walter sought help, though his status as a recovering alcoholic was occasionally mentioned thereafter.

Macy’s wife, Samantha Harper, appeared on at least one episode of Maude, and later became a regular on Lear’s Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman.

Filed Under: Entertainment

Primary Sidebar

 

Follow Us On Facebook



TRENDING NOW

Here’s your chance to give back on #GivingTuesday

Ben Affleck reveals Jennifer Lopez is starring in his next movie about one-legged wrestler

West facing heavy rain, snow before severe weather heads east

Chris Rock warns arresting Trump will only ‘make him more popular’

American citizen kidnapped in Mexico was seen being forced into van, daughter says: report

Buster Murdaugh blasts ‘baseless rumors’ surrounding 2015 death of classmate Stephen Smith

Footer

PUBLIC FILE INFO

Individuals with disabilities who have questions about the content of our public file or website may contact Isabella Gano by phone at
(910) 343-8826 or by email at Isabella.gano@foxwilmington.com

 
 » WSFX FCC Public File
»EEO Report
»Closed Captioning

SITE MAP

  • Local Headlines
  • Coronavirus
  • Local Weather
  • National Headlines
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Health

WSFX TV

  • Livestream Newscast
  • Meet Our Team
  • Sales & Programming
  • WELCOME HOME
  • Go With The Pros
  • Medically Speaking
  • WHAT’S ON FOX

Copyright © 2023 · American Spirit Media LLC · WSFX TV · Wilmington NC · Terms of Service · Privacy Policy