James Handy, the New York-born character actor who spent more than four decades populating Hollywood films and television dramas with quietly memorable performances, was killed Wednesday morning in his Los Angeles home. He was 81. Police allege he was stabbed by his girlfriend’s son.
LAPD officers arrived at the Tarzana residence around 9:30 a.m. following a 911 call in which the caller declared, “I am the son of man. I just killed the man of sin.” They found Handy in the front yard of the property with a stab wound to the chest. He was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
Investigators allege 44-year-old Michael Gledhill — the son of Handy’s girlfriend, with whom he also lived — carried out the stabbing. Gledhill flagged down the responding officers and identified himself as the person they were looking for. He was arrested and booked on a murder charge. Bail was set at $2 million. Authorities have not disclosed a motive.
Handy’s talent agent, Pam Ellis-Evenas, confirmed his death in a statement: “I could not have asked for a more talented, humble or gracious client and friend than James Handy.”
Few actors built a career so thoroughly from the inside out. Handy rarely led a film, but he was the kind of presence that anchored scenes and gave stories their texture. His screen career began in 1981 with a role in Taps, and he went on to appear in The Verdict, Arachnophobia, The Rocketeer, Jumanji, Unbreakable, and Logan. His final credited film role came in 2022, when he played Jimmy, a bartender, in Top Gun: Maverick.
On television, his range was equally broad. He took recurring roles as Arthur Devlin in Alias and Lou Handleman in Profiler, and appeared across series including NYPD Blue, The X-Files, and Quantum Leap across a span of three decades.
The LAPD stated the stabbing was an isolated incident and that there is no further danger to the public. The investigation remains ongoing.




















































