‘In Cold Blood,’ ‘Baretta’ star was 89
Robert Blake, a controversial actor best known for his roles in the television series “Baretta” and the film “In Cold Blood,” is dead at 89.
The actor’s son, Noah Blake, confirmed his death to The Post.
Born Michael Gubitosi in 1933, Blake’s tenured Hollywood career spanned six decades – from his childhood appearance in “Our Gang” (1939) to his most notable role in the 1967 adaptation of Truman Capote’s true-crime book “In Cold Blood.”
He also starred in “Treasure of the Sierra Madre” (1948), “Electra Glide in Blue” (1973) and “Lost Highway” (1997), his final film.
Blake scored a Primetime Emmy Award in 1975 for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series for “Baretta,” in which he played the titular character, Det. Tony Baretta, for four seasons.
His hard-nosed cop character — whose faithful companion was a talkative pet cockatoo Fred — had several oft-repeated catchphrases, including “That’s the name of that tune,” “You can take that to the bank” and “Don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time.”
Blake also received three other Emmy nominations.
Out of his three nominations for a Golden Globe, he only received one in 1976 for Best Actor in a Television Series (Drama), again for his rugged role in “Baretta.”
In 2019, Rose Lenore, the daughter of Blake and his second wife, Bonny Lee Bakley, told People that she was following in her actor father’s footsteps, saying she loved “getting to be someone else” when performing.
But his journey to fame was rocked with controversy when the actor was arrested in connection to Bakley’s murder.
On May 4, 2001, the 44-year-old was shot and killed while sitting in Blake’s car outside of a Studio City restaurant where the couple had just dined.
The following year, the Los Angeles Police Department arrested and charged Blake with murder but he eventually posted $1.5 million bail after one year in prison.
In 2005, Blake, who maintained his innocence, went on trial in connection with Bakley’s murder and was acquitted.
However, a civil jury found him liable for her death and ordered him to pay Bakley’s family $30 million — which left him bankrupt.
“If you want to know how to go through $10 million in five years, ask me how,” he told the media after the verdict, according to The Hollywood Reporter. “I was a rich man. I’m broke now.”
Following his acquittal, he told the Associated Press that he hoped for a career resurgence.
“I’d like to give my best performance,” he said in 2006. “I’d like to leave a legacy for Rosie about who I am. I’m not ready for a dog and fishing pole yet. I’d like to go to bed each night desperate to wake up each morning and create some magic.”
His acting career, however, remained stagnant, with his final performance in the 1997 film “Lost Highway,” co-starring Bill Pullman and Patricia Arquette, according to his IMDb page.
Rose described her childhood as “complicated” – she wasn’t even a year old when her mother died.
Until the time of the People interview, she hadn’t seen Blake since she was a small child, raised by her half-sister Delinah.
“When Rosie was two weeks old, I held her in my hands, and I asked God to take care of her ’cause I’m an old man and tomorrow is guaranteed to nobody,” Blake told CBS News in 2003. “I said, ‘God, if you please take care of Rosie, I will never, ever ask you anything again for the rest of my life.’”
In 2019, Blake suggested that his own upbringing was chaotic, telling “20/20” that his father was a “lunatic” and that Blake’s success brought out animosity in him.
“The more success I got, the more he wanted to kill me,” he claimed, according to USA Today.
“I was always at least 50% self-destructive, but when I wasn’t working, I couldn’t stand the way I felt,” he also told the program of his own inner issues. “Bipolar? I was tri-polar. I was quad-polar. Who the hell knows what kind of polar I was? I had 35 different feelings in five minutes. I was nuts when I was away from the camera.”
Blake is survived by his three children: Rose, Delinah and Noah.
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