Anthony Head, the British actor who brought warmth, wit and quiet authority to the role of Rupert Giles in Buffy the Vampire Slayer, has died at 72 after complications from pneumonia.
His daughters, Emily and Daisy Head, confirmed the death in a statement to the Press Association. “It is with heavy hearts that we announce the death of our extraordinary father, Anthony Head,” they wrote, adding that he “passed away peacefully, surrounded by his family.” The daughters described their grief as “far greater than the hole he has left behind,” and said his legacy lives on through his work and the impact he had on audiences.
Born Anthony Stewart Head in Camden Town, London, on February 20, 1954, he trained at the London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art before building a career across theatre, television and film. In Britain, he first became a household face through a long-running series of Nescafé Gold Blend television commercials in the 1980s — a slow-burn romantic storyline that earned him a devoted following before he ever set foot on an American soundstage.
His international breakthrough came in 1997 when he joined Buffy the Vampire Slayer as school librarian and Watcher Rupert Giles, mentor to Sarah Michelle Gellar’s vampire slayer. Head appeared in 121 episodes across five seasons, becoming one of the show’s most beloved figures. Creator Joss Whedon developed a spin-off series, Ripper, that would have followed Giles back in England through a series of ghost stories, but the project never reached production.
He worked steadily across decades in British television, with prominent roles in Merlin, Little Britain and Doctor Who during David Tennant’s era. In his final years, he played Rupert Mannion on Apple TV+’s Ted Lasso — the wealthy former club owner whose purchase of a rival team made him AFC Richmond’s chief antagonist in Season 3.
Head’s death arrives during a particularly painful period for the Buffy community. Both Michelle Trachtenberg and Nicholas Brendon, who played Dawn Summers and Xander Harris respectively, died within the past 18 months. Head’s own personal losses compounded the grief: his longtime partner and the mother of his daughters, Sarah Fisher, died suddenly at 61 in 2025.
Both daughters followed their father into acting. Emily appeared in The Inbetweeners and Daisy in Shadow and Bone — a theatrical lineage that reflected how central the craft was to their family’s identity. In their statement, they said their father “loved his job very much” and “always considered himself incredibly lucky.”





















































