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Spalding Gray Found Dead

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Posted by: Marc Flemming

A body found this weekend in the East River has been identified as that of missing actor Spalding Gray, the New York City medical examiner's office said Monday.

Gray, known for writing and starring in the autobiographical film "Swimming to Cambodia," had been reported missing on January 11.

He was 62.

He appeared in movies such as "The Killing Fields," "Beaches," "The Paper" and "Kate & Leopold," but was best known for his autobiographical monologues, including "Cambodia," "Monster in a Box" and "It's a Slippery Slope."

Source: CNN

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Posted by: Lawless

From Jonathan Wald and Annie Castellani
CNN
Monday, March 8, 2004 Posted: 5:58 PM EST (2258 GMT)

NEW YORK (CNN) -- A body pulled from the East River at 3 p.m. Sunday was that of actor-writer Spalding Gray, who had been missing since January 10, the New York City medical examiner's office said Monday afternoon.

The body was identified after an autopsy through dental and other X-rays, said Ellen Borakove, the medical examiner's spokeswoman. She said the cause of death is under investigation.

The only identifiable evidence on the body was a pair of black corduroy pants similar to the pair Gray was wearing on the night of his disappearance, she said.

Gray, 62, was known for writing and starring in the autobiographical "Swimming to Cambodia" and appearances in films such as "The Killing Fields," "Beaches," "The Paper" and "Kate & Leopold," but was most celebrated for his autobiographical monologues, including "Cambodia," "Monster in a Box" and "It's a Slippery Slope."

He had attempted suicide several times since a car accident in Ireland in June 2001 in which he sustained severe injuries. Family friend and spokeswoman Sara Vass said in January that he had never been the same since that crash and had subsequently received treatment at psychiatric hospitals.

In September 2003 Gray left a message at his Soho apartment in Manhattan saying goodbye to his wife, Kathie Russo, and telling her he planned to jump from the Staten Island Ferry that day. Russo called police, who notified authorities on the ferry. A despondent Gray was found sitting on the ferry and was escorted off the boat.

Russo and Gray's therapist thought he had been making progress since then and that he was through the worst of his depression.

His wife had held out hope he was alive during his disappearance, she told The Associated Press.

"Everyone that looks like him from behind, I go up and check to make sure it's not him," Russo said in a phone interview with the AP about a week ago. "If someone calls and hangs up, I always do star-69. You're always thinking, 'maybe.' "

Telling stories
Gray was sui generis: He looked like an Ivy League professor and spoke with a New England accent, but spent years in the often avant-garde downtown New York theater scene and created a painfully confessional style in which the stage practically became a therapist's office.

He performed sitting down, usually with only a desk, chair and glass of water for company.

"This man may be the ultimate WASP neurotic, analyzing his actions with an intensity that would be unpleasantly egomaniacal if it weren't so self-deprecatingly funny," Associated Press Drama Critic Michael Kuchwara wrote in 1996. "He questions everything and ends up more exhausted than satisfied."

Gray's monologues included "Cambodia," about his experiences in a bit part in the movie "The Killing Fields"; "Gray's Anatomy," about his struggles with a serious eye problem; and "Monster in a Box," about an endlessly growing semi-autobiographical novel concerning his mother's suicide.

He appeared in a handful of Broadway productions, most notably the 1989 Tony Award-winning revival of "Our Town" and the 2000 revival of Gore Vidal's "The Best Man."

His 38 films include "Beaches," "Straight Talk" and "King of the Hill."

Coping with tragedy
Gray was born June 5, 1941, in Barrington, Rhode Island. A key event of his life was his mother's 1967 suicide, and he struggled to come to terms with her death.

After overcoming a nervous breakdown and years on the theatrical fringe, he had established a successful acting and writing career, married and had children. But the car accident in Ireland plunged him back into depression.

Gray, who was not wearing a seat belt, suffered head trauma and a broken hip and had labored to deal with ongoing complications.

Billy Doyle, a Staten Island Ferry worker, reported in January that he had seen Gray coming off the Staten Island Ferry late at night, and Russo and Gray's older brother, Rockwell Gray, feared that trip may have been a "dry run" to prepare for a suicide attempt, Vass said in January.

Police said he was last seen at 6:30 p.m. January 10 at his Manhattan apartment, and he spoke to his 6-year-old son by telephone at 9 p.m., but he did not show up for a dinner appointment that evening or a re-scheduled flight to Colorado the next day.

The body was found off the Greenpoint section of Brooklyn, near Kent Avenue.

Gray is survived by Russo; three children; and his brother Rockwell Gray, an English professor in St. Louis.

CNN Producer Vivienne Foley contributed to this report.

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