Heartbreaking new details have emerged in the shock suicide of Columbo icon Peter Falk’s daughter Jacqueline.
Jacqueline was 60 years old when she hanged herself at a residence in Los Angeles, with her body discovered on April 27, an estimated five days after she died.
She was one of the two daughters Falk adopted with his college sweetheart and first wife Alyce Mayo, whom he was married to from 1960 to 1976.
Per an autopsy report obtained by The Daily Mail, Jacqueline’s body was found by police after her best friend requested a welfare check, after not hearing from her since April 20.
‘Multiple’ handwritten suicide notes were found taped to the garage wall, per the report, with Jacqueline’s body found in the garage.
It was estimated she had died by suicide on April 22, with toxicology testing confirming she was not under the influence of alcohol or drugs at the time.
Heartbreaking new details have emerged in the shock suicide death of Columbo icon Peter Falk’s daughter Jacqueline – pictured 1998
Falk landed his most beloved role around the same time he welcomed his daughters, starring as Lieutenant Columbo on the classic detective series
The nature of the notes was not disclosed, with Jacqueline identified at the scene by her drivers’ license.
Her sister Catherine Falk-Rothchild was informed of the death on April 27.
Known as Jackie, Jacqueline was predeceased by both of her parents, Falk in 2011 at the age of 83 and Mayo five years later, aged 85.
Her survivors include her sister Falk-Rothchild, an ex-private investigator who waged a furious public battle with Falk’s second wife Shera Danese, accusing her of refusing to let his daughters see him during his Alzheimer’s decline.
Falk landed his most beloved part around the same time he welcomed his children, starring as Lieutenant Columbo on the classic detective series.
He won four Emmy Awards leading the cast of the show during its original run from 1968 to 1978 and its subsequent revival from 1989 to 2003.
His movie work included his Oscar-nominated turns in Murder Inc. and Pocketful of Miracles, as well as roles in It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World and The Princess Bride.
A crucial thread in his big screen career was his longstanding personal and professional bond to filmmaker John Cassavetes, which most famously resulted in the 1974 drama A Woman Under the Influence, starring Falk opposite the director’s wife Gena Rowlands.
Per an autopsy report obtained by The Daily Mail, Jacqueline’s body was found by police after her best friend requested a welfare check, after not hearing from her since April 20: Jacqueline and Falk are pictured in 2002
Falk is pictured in 2002 with his second and final wife Shera Danese, whom daughter Catherine accused of refusing to let his daughters visit him at home amid his final decline
Falk kept a veil of privacy tightly drawn over his family life, although he once remarked of his daughters: ‘I think they think a lot of me,’ via People.
In recent years, Catherine has painted an affectionate portrait of the childhood she and Jacqueline enjoyed with Falk and Mayo.
She explained that their parents ‘were best friends’ after their divorce, taking their children to Los Angeles Kings hockey games and to late-night dinners afterward.
‘I remember watching my mom and dad laugh and tell stories about their college years. It was nice as a teenager to experience that,’ she told Closer.
He won four Emmy Awards leading the cast of Columbo both during its original run from 1968 to 1978, and its subsequent revival from 1989 to 2003
His enduring films include the 1974 John Cassavetes drama A Woman Under the Influence, in which he starred alongside the director’s wife ,Gena Rowlands
However, in Falk’s final years, as his mind frayed under the effects of dementia, a wrench was thrown into his relationship with both his daughters.
His second wife, Shera Danese, whom he married the year after his split from Catherine and Jacqueline’s mother, obtained a conservatorship of Falk.
According to Catherine, Danese kept Falk away from his daughters and neglected to keep them abreast of his condition as his health deteriorated.
In her version of events, her stepmother did not inform Catherine that Falk had died and then prevented her from attending his funeral.
Jacqueline kept her feelings on the subject private, but Catherine took the feud into the public square, demanding: ‘How would you feel if you had to hear from the media, or hear from an attorney that your dad passed away?’ to Inside Edition.
‘I think that most people feel that I am this money-grubbing daughter, that I’m just going after my dad to get money,’ she acknowledged.
‘There were definitely bumps in the road, but we had reconciled and I had a very loving relationship with him. I adored him, he adored me.’
In Catherine’s view, her stepmother was squarely to blame for the problems she experienced with her father, who ‘was married to a woman that made it really difficult for my father to feel free. We weren’t allowed to go to his house.’
Catherine then successfully lobbied for the passage in New York State of what became known as Peter Falk’s Law, a piece of legislation that protects citizens’ rights to visit their ailing parents and be kept informed about their state of health.
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