He was the face you knew but the name you never forgot again. Just days after celebrating his 90th birthday, surrounded by love, he was gone. A brother’s trembling Facebook post. A niece’s tender photo. A mystery cause of death. Hollywood is in shock, fans are grieving, and the final chapter of his extraordinary life will brie… Continues…
Bill Cobbs’ passing at 90 closes the book on one of Hollywood’s most quietly powerful careers. Born in Cleveland in 1934, he served eight years as a radar technician in the U.S. Air Force before daring, at 36, to run away to New York and chase a dream most would have abandoned. He built that dream onstage first, leading plays in the city before stepping onto film sets.
From his debut in 1974’s “The Taking of Pelham One Two Three” to scene‑stealing turns in “The Bodyguard,” “New Jack City,” “That Thing You Do!,” “Trading Places,” and “Night at the Museum,” Cobbs became the soulful constant in other people’s stories. He moved seamlessly through television—“The Sopranos,” “Walker, Texas Ranger,” “CSI,” “Criminal Minds,” “Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.”—always elevating the moment. Family called him a devoted partner, brother, uncle, and surrogate parent; fans called him a legend. His work remains, steady and comforting, long after the cameras stopped.