Robert Urich

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Robert Urich (December 19, 1946April 16, 2002) was an Emmy-winning actor, best known for playing private investigators on the television series Spenser: For Hire (19851988) and Vega$ (19781981). He also starred in numerous other television series over the years including: S.W.A.T. (1975), Soap (1977) and The Lazarus Man (1996).

He was of Rusyn and Slovak extraction and raised Roman Catholic in the small town of Toronto, Ohio. Due to the similarity in names with Toronto, Ontario, many sources list him incorrectly as being a Canadian. His second wife, Heather, actually is a Canadian from the latter city.

Urich attended Florida State University on a football scholarship. In 1968, he earned a bachelor's degree in Radio and Television Communications. He went on to Michigan State University after working in Ohio to earn a master's degree in Broadcast Research and Management.

Urich was first married to actress Barbara Rucker (196874)[1]. He later married actress Heather Menzies [2] in 1975, and they remained married until his death in 2002. Heather Menzies Urich had played one of the von Trapp children in the film version of The Sound of Music with Julie Andrews. Urich and Menzies adopted three children. Like her husband, Menzies battled cancer; however she is a cancer survivor.

Between 1973 and just prior to his death in 2002, Urich had lead or supporting roles in no less than 17 television series (including several documentary programs). He also regularly hosted National Geographic TV specials. In 1992, Urich hosted the CBS TV special The Bat, the Cat, and the Penguin, which was a behind-the-scenes look of the upcoming motion picture Batman Returns. Most of his TV series were short-lived, however several were successes, including Vega$ and Spenser: For Hire. In the 1990s, Urich reprised the role of Spenser in several made-for-TV films. He played a main character, Jake Spoon, in the acclaimed television miniseries Lonesome Dove, a notable role for which received many positive reviews.

In 1996, Urich announced that he had been diagnosed with a rare form of cancer that attacks joints called synovial cell sarcoma. The TV series he was working on at the time, The Lazarus Man, was cancelled. He ultimately died from this disease at the age of 55, although he continued to appear in film and TV during treatment. His final TV series role was in the short-lived sitcom Emeril (starring Emeril Lagasse) in 2001.

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