Deadline14%

Randolph Mantooth Dead: 'Emergency!' Star Who Appeared On Soap Operas Was 805%

By Erik Pedersen24%

7/11/2026, 12:16:45 AM

BS Summary: This article contains 0 faulty reasoning types, including no named faulty reasoning patterns yet, with no single egregious example has been isolated yet. Analysis detected 0 faulty-reasoning hits from 469 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 21.5% and a BS Rank of 5% (13,107 of 13,766 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 95.20% of the article peer group.

July 10, 2026 5:16pm

Randolph Mantooth in 'Emergency!,' left and in a publicity still for 'The City'

Randolph Mantooth , who starred as a Los Angeles paramedic on the NBC series Emergency! along with turns on soap operas including As the World Turns, One Life to Live and The City, has died. He was 80.

His family told our sister site The Hollywood Reporter that Mantooth died July 9 in hospice in Ventura, CA, after a long illness.

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Born on September 19, 1945, in Sacramento, Mantooth began his screen career in the early 1970s, guesting on episodes of such popular series as The Virginian, McCloud, Adam-12, Marcus Welby, M.D. and Rod Serling’s Night Gallery . His big break came when he was cast as LAFD paramedic John Gage in Emergency, which was executive produced by Jack Webb and played like a fire department take on Dragnet.

Debuting as a midseason replacement show in January 1972, Emergency! was shot in a near-documentary style and followed the adventures — and mundane downtime firehouse banter — of Squad 51. Each week, Mantooth’s Gage, partner Roy De Soto (Kevin Tighe) and their firefighter colleagues would answer calls both routine and calamitous. Viewers knew it was one of the latter when an extended alarm would sound at the station. The cast also featured Robert Fuller, Julie London and Bobby Troup.

Running for five seasons into September 1977, the hourlong drama with comic elements never was a ratings hit, only denting the year-end primetime Top 30 once in the three-network universe. But it was solid counterprogramming against its 8 p.m. Saturday competition of CBS’ All in the Family and in its final two seasons, Norman Lear classic spinoff The Jeffersons.

During its run, rock band The Tubes named-checked Mantooth in the song “What Do You Want From Life?” from its 1975 debut LP. In it, singer Fee Waybill was rattling off a list of things the listening is “entitled to” as an American citizen. Among them was “a personally autographed picture of

After his run in Emergency!, Mantooth went on to guest star in numerous series including Charlie’s Angels, Dallas, Murder She Wrote, The Fall Guy, L.A. Law, MacGyver, Walker, Texas Ranger and Criminal Minds, among many others. His last television credit listed on IMDb was a 2-episode guest spot in Sons of Anarchy in 2011.

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469 words analyzed.

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