A certain type of actor keeps a film cohesive without anyone noticing. For almost fifty years, James Handy was that actor. He was the doctor telling Wolverine to slow down, the bartender you only vaguely recognized, and the background police officer with two clever lines. He has over 150 credits in movies and TV shows, including Jumanji, NYPD Blue, and Top Gun: Maverick. And on Wednesday morning, June 3, 2026, he was fatally stabbed in the front yard of a house in Tarzana, a peaceful neighborhood in the San Fernando Valley where not much ever happens.
Handy was eighty-one. The Los Angeles Police Department identified the suspect as Michael Gledhill, a 44-year-old man who shared the Erwin Street home with his mother, Handy’s longtime girlfriend. The attack’s aftermath was nearly as bizarre as the attack itself. When Gledhill dialed 911, he said something eerie and mysterious to the dispatchers: “I am the son of man.” The man of sin was just killed by me. Around 9:30 a.m., Gledhill flagged down West Valley division officers and informed them that he was the person they were searching for. There was neither a chase nor a standoff. Just a man standing close to a front yard where another man had been stabbed in the chest and lay unconscious. Handy was taken to a nearby hospital by paramedics, but he was declared dead soon after.
What kind of domestic strife had been developing behind the walls of that Tarzana house is difficult to ignore. No clear motive has been disclosed, and detectives have described it as an isolated incident. Gledhill was charged with murder and given a two-million-dollar bail amount at Van Nuys Jail. The investigation is still ongoing, but real answers—not procedural ones—seem far off.

The lack of recognition Handy received during his lifetime, in comparison to the amount of work he produced, is what makes this story particularly bitter. He was born on March 19, 1945, in New York City. He started performing professionally in the late 1970s and hasn’t really stopped since. His filmography resembles a tour guide through forty years of popular culture in the United States. In Arachnophobia, he portrayed Milton Briggs. In Jumanji, he worked as an exterminator. In Logan, he played a doctor attempting to reason with a fading Wolverine opposite Hugh Jackman. He co-starred with Jennifer Connelly as Jimmy the bartender in Top Gun: Maverick, a minor part in a huge movie that nevertheless felt cozy and grounded, thanks in large part to performers like him.
He had even more range thanks to television. Criminal Minds, NCIS: Los Angeles, Cold Case, CSI: NY, Rizzoli and Isles, Alias, and almost every major crime procedural of the previous thirty years were among the shows he cycled through. He appeared on The George Carlin Show and had recurring roles in The Pretender. Handy was once referred to as one of the best character actors he knew by director Brian Connors, who cast him in the 2021 comedy Senior Entourage. Rarely does that kind of praise make headlines, but it does circulate on sets and in casting offices, where it really counts.
In Hollywood, there is an unspoken but generally accepted belief that character actors are the foundation of the business. They carry the scene, not the poster. Despite changing studio priorities and generations of leading men, Handy consistently and quietly accomplished that. With evident sorrow, Pam Ellis-Evenas, his talent agent, confirmed his passing to NBC News, referring to him as “the gentleman who was attacked and killed on Wednesday in Tarzana.” For someone who spent his career performing honorable, unseen labor, even the wording seemed like a last act of dignity.
What brought Gledhill to that front yard on a Wednesday morning is still a mystery. The 911 call’s religious language suggests something volatile and potentially psychological, raising more questions than it answers. However, the investigation’s findings won’t alter the reality that a man who devoted fifty years to an industry and demanded very little in return was removed from it in the most absurd manner possible. Every year, Hollywood loses people to illness, accidents, and aging. It feels different to lose someone like this. Apart from the fact that James Handy should have had a more subdued conclusion, it feels wrong in a way that is hard to describe.
