Gene Hackman and pianist wife Betsy Arakawa found dead at home with their dog
Posted: Thu Feb 27, 2025 1:21 pm
The Oscar-winning star of The French Connection, The Conversation, Superman and The Poseidon Adventure has died, along with his classical musician wife
Oscar-winning actor Gene Hackman and his wife, classical pianist Betsy Arakawa, were found dead on Wednesday afternoon in their home in the Santa Fe Summit community northeast of the city.
In a statement to the Santa Fe New Mexican, County Sheriff Adan Mendoza said: “We can confirm that both Gene Hackman and his wife were found deceased Wednesday.” The Press Association confirmed there is an “active investigation’’ into the deaths. Sheriff Mendoza said there was no immediate indication of foul play. He did not provide a cause of death or say when the couple might have died.
Hackman, 95, had lived in Santa Fe, New Mexico, since the 1980s and married Arakawa, 63, in 1991, after meeting her in the gym where she then worked. Little is known of Arakawa’s later career as a musician, although in 2014 Hackman praised her “unwavering, specific read-throughs” of the western novels he later took to authoring.
Sheriff’s deputies arrived at the couple’s home in a gated community called Old Sunset Trail on Wednesday afternoon to investigate the deaths of two elderly people and a dog. It was unclear whether the deputies were responding to a report of the deaths or if they were making a welfare check at the home.
The deputies discovered the bodies of a man in his 90s and a woman in her 60s, Mendoza initially reported.
Born in 1930, he joined the marines in the late 1940s, and decided to study acting in the late 1950s. Hackman befriended Dustin Hoffman at the Pasadena Playhouse and the two were voted “the least likely to succeed”. With various bit parts on TV and stage under his belt, Hackman made his big screen debut opposite Warren Beatty in melodrama Lilith in 1964.
Three years later, Hackman made his first real impression with another role alongside Beatty. Playing Buck Barrow in Arthur Penn’s Bonnie and Clyde, he secured his first Oscar nomination, for best supporting actor. He lost to George Kennedy in Cool Hand Luke but it led to his first leading role in 1970’s I Never Sang For My Father with Melvyn Douglas. However, Hackman struggled with the father-son relationship drama. “I didn’t think a lot of the project and was taking it very lightly,” Hackman said in a 2002 interview with the Guardian. “Then Melvyn Douglas came up to me and said, ‘Gene, you’ll never get what you want with the way you’re acting’ and he didn’t mean acting – he meant that I was not behaving myself. He taught me not to use my reservations as an excuse for not doing the work.”
The advice helped to craft a performance that gave Hackman his second Oscar nomination. The following year he took the lead in William Friedkin’s action thriller The French Connection and graduated to the A-list, thanks to the film’s box office success. Hackman won his first Oscar for best actor for his role as Jimmy “Popeye” Doyle.
Hackman had further success in the 70s with roles in The Poseidon Adventure and A Bridge Too Far, and also displayed a talent for comedy with acclaimed turns in Young Frankenstein and Superman, playing the superhero’s nemesis Lex Luthor in the latter.
But his best work of the decade could be found in films that few went to see: Arthur Penn’s mystery noir Night Moves, Jerry Schatzberg’s road movie Scarecrow and Coppola’s Palme d’Or-winning conspiracy thriller The Conversation. During the same period he also turned down roles in Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind and Raiders of the Lost Ark.

