RIP Richard Chamberlain. Credit: Shutterstock, Serge Rocco
Richard Chamberlain, the American actor who rose to fame as the heartthrob Dr Kildare and became one of the biggest television stars of the 1980s, has died aged 90.
Chamberlain’s publicist Harlan Boll confirmed to the BBC that the treasured actor died late Saturday night (March 29) in Waimanalo, Hawaii, due to complications from a stroke – just hours before his 91st birthday.
Chamberlain’s longtime ex-partner Martin Rabbett called him an “amazing and loving soul”, adding: “Our beloved Richard is with the angels now… our love is under his wings, lifting him to his next great adventure.”
Richard Chamberlain: From teen idol to TV and film royalty
Born in Beverly Hills in 1934, Chamberlain shot to fame in 1961 with his role in the hospital drama Dr Kildare, a part that brought him instant stardom and a fanbase that sent him 12,000 letters a week. “I used to get chased by hot teenage girls,” he once told TV Guide. His popularity saw him crowned Photoplay magazine’s most popular male star for three consecutive years from 1963 to 1965.
In the 1980s, Chamberlain earned the title “king of the mini-series” for leading roles in Centennial, Shogun, and The Thorn Birds. In Shogun, he portrayed an English sailor adapting to life in 17th-century Japan, while The Thorn Birds saw him play a conflicted Catholic priest in an illicit romance – watched by 60 per cent of the US television audience and earning 16 Emmy nominations.
Chamberlain’s film roles included The Three Musketeers, The Towering Inferno, and Ken Russell’s The Music Lovers, in which he played composer Tchaikovsky, reflecting his own journey toward accepting his homosexuality.
Richard Chamberlain’s private life
Despite his fame, Chamberlain kept his personal life private for decades. He came out publicly in 2003 with the release of his memoir Shattered Love, in which he described the pressures of Hollywood: “I was desperately afraid [being gay] would derail my career.”
He detailed years of psychological trauma from his father’s emotional abuse and the internal struggle of maintaining a public image that didn’t reflect his truth.
Though he and Rabbett separated in 2010, they remained close until his death.
Chamberlain continued acting into his 80s, with his final film role in 2019 – Finding Julia.
Richard Chamberlain’s death marks the end of a Hollywood era, but his impact on television history and LGBTQ+ visibility lives on.
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