Jim Ward, the veteran voice actor behind The Fairly OddParents’ Doug Dimmadome and Chet Ubetcha and Ratchet & Clank’s Captain Qwark, has died at 66 after a long battle with Alzheimer’s disease. His wife, Janice, and longtime representative, Arlene Thornton, confirmed that Ward died on Dec. 10 at the Silverado Beverly Place Memory Care facility in Los Angeles. Political commentator Stephanie Miller, his former radio co-host, first shared news of his death on social media.
Ward became a familiar presence to a generation of TV viewers through Nickelodeon’s The Fairly OddParents, working on the series from 2001 to 2017. Alongside his recurring roles as the blustering tycoon Doug Dimmadome and excitable reporter Chet Ubetcha, he appeared across episodes as a range of supporting characters. He also voiced roles on Ben 10, Wolverine and the X-Men and the 2006 revival of Biker Mice from Mars, winning a Daytime Emmy in 2009 for his work on the latter.
Game players knew Ward for a deep slate of credits. Along with his long-running turn as the pompous superhero Captain Qwark for Insomniac’s Ratchet & Clank franchise, he appeared in titles such as Resident Evil 4, Metal Gear Solid 3, Diablo III, Fallout: New Vegas, Red Dead Redemption II, Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic and The Elder Scrolls Online. Colleagues in the games industry have described recording sessions with Ward as fast, funny and technically sharp, with one voice director calling those days “some of the highlights of my career.”
His influence extended beyond booths and animation studios. From 2004 to 2017, Ward served as co-host and impressionist on the progressive talk program The Stephanie Miller Show, where listeners came to know him for rapid-fire character work and political sendups. Miller called him a “voice deity” in a tribute post and dedicated a broadcast to his memory on Dec. 11.
Ward’s family has spoken publicly about his health in recent years. He received an Alzheimer’s diagnosis in 2017 and later battled a severe COVID-19 infection that left him hospitalized and paralyzed for months, forcing his retirement from new voice roles, including a planned return to Ratchet & Clank. His wife told outlets that complications from advanced Alzheimer’s led to his death.
Tributes from fans and peers across animation, gaming and radio flooded social platforms after news of his passing, with many calling out specific characters who shaped their childhoods or early gaming years. Messages on memorial pages and community forums describe Ward as a generous scene partner and a performer who could swing from broad comedy to grounded sincerity in a single line read. For players, viewers and listeners, his voice remains threaded through some of the defining cartoons and games of the last three decades.





















































