Veteran actor Tom Troupe, whose seven‑decade career spanned Broadway debuts, cult television favorites and enduring stage partnerships with wife Carole Cook, died Sunday at his Beverly Hills home, five days after his 97th birthday. His family said the cause was natural. Born in North Kansas City on 15 July 1928, Troupe moved to New York in 1948, trained at Uta Hagen’s HB Studio and entered Broadway history in 1957 as Peter in The Diary of Anne Frank.
He became a reliable presence on the Great White Way, originating the role of Prince John opposite Rosemary Harris in The Lion in Winter in 1966 and later tackling contemporary fare such as The Gin Game. Television soon beckoned: in 1967 he appeared as Lt. Harold in the classic Star Trek episode “Arena” and as David Day in Mission: Impossible, credits that helped define a résumé dotted with guest spots on Murder, She Wrote, Cheers and Cagney & Lacey. Film work included roles in Kelly’s Heroes, The Devil’s Brigade and Gus Van Sant’s My Own Private Idaho.
Offstage, Troupe’s 59‑year marriage to Cook was itself theatre lore; the pair were dubbed “the Lunts of L.A.” for headlining local productions while mentoring younger performers. In 2002 the Los Angeles Stage Alliance honored the couple with its Ovation Career Achievement Award, cementing their status as pillars of the city’s arts scene. Colleagues remembered Troupe as “a craftsman without ego,” in the words of Cheers alum Bebe Neuwirth, who credited his rehearsal room calm for “making risk feel safe.”
Troupe continued performing into his 90s and co‑founded the acting studio The Faculty, where he taught until shortly before the pandemic.He is survived by his son Christopher, daughter‑in‑law Becky Coulter, granddaughter Ashley and several nieces and nephews.A public celebration of life is being planned at the Pasadena Playhouse, a venue where Troupe and Cook frequently shared the stage.















































