Actor James Tolkan of ‘Back to the Future’ and ‘Top Gun’ dies at age 94 6%
By Theresa Braine0%
3/29/2026, 11:27:17 PM
Topics: Film Industry, Television Industry
Keywords: Snyde, Latest Headlines
BS Summary: This article contains 14 faulty reasoning types, including Halo Effect, Framing Effect, and Appeal to Authority, with Availability Heuristic as the most egregious example at 13.5% saturation with 78 hits. Analysis detected 448 faulty-reasoning hits from 576 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 21.8% and a BS Rank of 6% (15,911 of 16,813 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 94.60% of the article peer group.
James Tolkan attends the "Back To The Future: The Musical" Gala Performance at Winter Garden Theatre on July 25, 2023 in New York City.
(Photo by Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images)
Tributes poured in over the weekend as news spread about the death of actor James Tolkan, famous as hardnosed authority figures in “Back to the Future” and “Top Gun.”
He was 94.
The veteran stage and screen actor — who was also a member of the original ensemble cast of Broadway’s “Glengarry Glen Ross” — “passed away peacefully” on Thursday in Saranac Lake, in upstate New York, where he had spent his last years living a low-key life with his wife of 54 years, Parmelee Welles, the “Back to the Future” franchise’s website announced.
His representatives did not specify a cause of death.
Tolkan barked Vice Principal Gerald Strickland’s reproach, “Slacker!”
across the “Back to the Future” franchise, and similarly slammed Tom Cruise’s brash character in “Top Gun” in playing Commander Tom “Stinger” Jardian.
Co-stars and crew alike remembered him fondly.
“I dearly, dearly loved Mr.
Tolkan,” a “Back to the Future” crew member told People.
“As mean and nasty as Mr.
Strickland was, James Tolkan was the polar opposite.
He was just one of the kindest men you would ever meet.”
“Back to the Future” star Lea Thompson remembered Tolkan as a “kind, beautiful, wonderful actor and friend,” posting a slew of photos on social media.
“Oh boy, I loved this man,” she wrote, punctuated with a broken heart emoji.
“Rest in peace.
You were never a slacker.
You were the best.”
“James, where you’re going…you don’t need roads,” co-star Christopher Lloyd penned on Instagram alongside a photo of Strickland.
“Miss you friend.”
James Tolkan, left, with Michael J.
Fox in "Back to the Future" (1985).
(Universal)
Tolkan was born on June 20, 1931, in Calumet, Mich., to cattle dealer Ralph Tolkan and wife Mergery Sibola.
He briefly attended three colleges and served in the Navy during the Korean War before boarding a bus for New York City “with $75 in his pocket,” where he lived in a “cold water flat where the rent equaled his VA check,” the “Back to the Future” site noted.
He worked on the docks and studied acting with Stella Adler and Lee Strasberg.
During 25 years in New York, Tolkan dipped into movies, appearing in Sidney Lumet’s “Serpico” in 1973 and “Prince of the City” in 1981, according to the actor’s IMDB bio.
He also played Napoleon in Woody Allen’s 1975 hit “Love and Death” and was a coroner in “The Amityville Horror.”
In 1983, “War Games” brought him to Los Angeles, where he continued his movie career with “Masters of the “Universe,” “Dick Tracy” and a host of other roles.
He interspersed that with television work, starring in “Cobra” for its sole 1993-94 season, and guest spots or recurring roles in several series, including “Nero,” “Remington Steele,” “The Equalizer,” “Hill Street Blues,” among many others.
Portrayals of a judge in “Phil Spector” in 2013 and a pianist in the Kurt Russell Western “Bone Tomahawk” in 2015 rounded out his five-decade career.
Tolkan is survived by Welles, and three nieces in Des Moines, Iowa.
Welles said through his management company that the animal lover would appreciate donations in his memory to local animal shelters, animal rescue organizations or Humane Society chapters.
With News Wire Services
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