Stuart Damon Death: Longtime Actor on ‘general Hospital,’ Passed Away at 84 After Battling With Renal Failure!

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Stuart Damon (February 5, 1937 – June 29, 2021) was an actor from the United States. He was well known for his Emmy Award-winning 30-year role as Dr Alan Quartermaine on the American soap opera General Hospital, for which he received an Emmy Award in 1999.

He was most known outside of the United States for his portrayal as Craig Stirling in The Champions. Damon was born in Brooklyn, New York, the son of a manufacturer named Marvin Leonard Zonis.

Damon’s parents were Russian Jewish immigrants who fled the Bolshevik Revolution and settled in America.

Name  Stuart Damon
Birth February 5, 1937
Age 84 years
Genre American Actor
Death June 29, 2021, due to Renal Failure
Net Worth $2-4 Million 

Stuart Damon’s Career!

Damon’s portrayal as the Prince in the 1965 film adaptation of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella, starring Lesley Ann Warren, helped pave the way for a long career in television soap operas.

In the same year, he starred in the Broadway musical Do I Hear a Waltz?, which was created by Richard Rodgers (music) and Stephen Sondheim (book) (lyrics). He had previously performed in an Off-Broadway version of The Boys From Syracuse, which used Rodgers’ music and Lorenz Hart’s lyrics.

The cast CDs of these musicals, as well as the song Irma La Douce, feature Damon significantly (1960). In 1965, Damon co-starred in the popular West End musical Charlie Girl with Anna Neagle and was cast as American secret agent Craig Stirling in the ITC series The Champions, alongside British performers Alexandra Bastedo and William Gaunt.

He also starred in an episode of The Saint with Roger Moore, which is credited as the inspiration for the following series The Persuaders!, with Tony Curtis playing Damon’s character.

In 1968, he played Henry Adams in the BBC TV rendition of The £1,000,000 Bank Note, in which he starred. Damon also starred as magician Harry Houdini in Man of Magic, an elaborately staged London musical.

In the 1970s, he was cast in the series The Adventurer starring Gene Barry and Catherine Schell, and he only appeared in two episodes. Damon later admitted that he was turned down by Barry because of his height: at over six feet, he towered over the shorter Barry.

He returned to the United States after appearing in numerous other British television shows, including Thriller, The New Avengers, and the children’s series The Adventures of Black Beauty, in which he portrayed a hypnotist.

He made his most well-known American role as Dr Alan Quartermaine Sr. at General Hospital in 1977. On the short-lived GH spin-off Port Charles (1997–2003), he reprised the character.

For his depiction of Alan, a physician addicted to the opioid hydrocodone, Damon won the Emmy for Best Supporting Actor in 1999. For the first time in almost 40 years, Damon was reunited with Alexandra Bastedo and William Gaunt in 2005 to offer audio commentary for a DVD release of The Champions.

Stuart Damon death

Damon was sacked from General Hospital by Jill Farren Phelps in December 2006, on the direction of Anne Sweeney and Brian Frons, and his final airdate was set for February 26, 2007, when his character died. The cause for his release has not been revealed.

The final scene was shot on February 5, which also happened to be Damon’s 70th birthday. Fellow General Hospital performers expressed their displeasure over Damon’s firing to the press, with Damon’s on-screen wife, Leslie Charleson, noting, “In August, we will celebrate our 30th wedding anniversary.

The timing makes me very dissatisfied with how soap operas are heading, with their utter disrespect for history and flagrant disregard for veterans.” Despite the character’s death, Damon stayed on the show as Alan Quartermaine’s ghost, nagging his sister Tracy about forging Alan’s will.

He stayed on the show until December 23, 2008, when he appeared to Monica on Christmas Eve to tell her he loved her. On September 18, 2009, Damon made his first appearance on As the World Turns as Janet and Teri Ciccone’s “Uncle” Ralph Manzo, a mob-connected businessman.

On October 30, 2009, he quit the series, but he returned on August 23-25, 2010. On Days of Our Lives from March 19–25, 2010, Damon played Governor Jim Ford.

Damon appeared in two episodes of General Hospital (August 26, 2011, and August 29, 2011), in which Alan appears in Monica’s fantasy sequence. After Jason’s absence, he reappeared as a ghost in November 2012, when son AJ was revealed to be alive.

He featured as a hallucination shared by Tracy and Monica in the show’s 50th-anniversary episode, which aired on April 2, 2013, alongside Rick Webber (Chris Robinson) and Emily Quartermaine (Natalia Livingston).

Stuart Damon’s Personal Life!

On March 12, 1961, Damon married Deirdre Ann Ottewill, a former actress, singer, and dancer. Christopher and Jennifer Zonis were their children.

Stuart Damon’s Death!

Damon died on June 29, 2021, at the age of 84, at the Motion Picture & Television Fund retirement community in Los Angeles, where he had lived for seven years, of kidney failure.

Damon had been suffering from renal disease, according to KABC reporter George Pennacchio, who quoted Damon’s son, Christopher, who said of his father’s time on the soap, “It was his favourite place to be.

” He adored playing Alan and was always grateful for the opportunity to do so. It was his life’s work.”

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