Stars who died this year


In 2026, Hollywood is saying goodbye to beloved entertainers across television, films, music, and more.

Among the famous figures whose deaths were announced in the beginning of the year are Grey’s Anatomy and Euphoria star Eric Dane, teen heartthrob James Van Der Beek, beloved Schitt’s Creek and Home Alone actress Catherine O’Hara, Grateful Dead founding member Bob Weir, The Thing and Punky Brewster star T.K. Carter, Dilbert creator Scott Adams, and Valentino Garavani, the iconic fashion designer who appeared in The Devil Wears Prada.

Read on to remember the lives and careers of the stars who have died in 2026.

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Robert Carradine

Robert Carradine.

Albert L. Ortega/Getty


Actor Robert Carradine, who starred in the Revenge of the Nerds films of the ’80s, as well as the Lizzie McGuire TV show and movie in the 2000s, died Feb. 23. He was 71. His many other acting projects included the movies Mean Streets (1973), Coming Home (1978), and The Long Riders (1980), which also featured his brothers David, who died in 2009, and Keith.

Luci4

Rapper Luci4.

Luci4/Instagram


Los Angeles rapper Luci4, whose real name was James Dear, died Feb. 22 in Los Angeles. He was 23. Dear’s 2021 song “Bodypartz” remained popular for years, having racked up more than 4.3 million views on YouTube and being certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America in 2024. The influential artist released multiple albums and singles over the past several years, including last year’s album VAMPMANIA 3.

Eric Dane

Eric Dane as Mark Sloan on ‘Grey’s Anatomy’.

Bob D’Amico/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty


Eric Dane, Grey’s Anatomy‘s beloved McSteamy, died on Feb. 19, less than a year after he publicly disclosed his diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). He was 53. Dane made his Grey’s debut exactly 20 years before his death on season 2 of the medical drama, playing hunky plastic surgeon Dr. Mark Sloan, and soon became a series regular and a fan-favorite character. His other credits include the shows Euphoria, Charmed, and Gideon’s Crossing, and the films X-Men: The Last Stand, Burlesque, Valentine’s Day, Marley & Me, and The Last Ship.

Lil Poppa

Lil Poppa in Atlanta in 2024.

Prince Williams/WireImage


Lil Poppa, the prolific Georgia rapper who scored hits with songs like “Love & War” and “Purple Hearts,” died on Feb. 18 at the age of 25. The Jacksonville-based musician, born Janarious Mykel Wheeler, broke out with the 2016 single “Fall Off” when he was only 15. He proceeded to release numerous singles, albums, and mixtapes, signing to “No Fake Love” rapper Yo Gotti’s Collective Music Group imprint.

Jordan James Parke

Jordan James Parke.

Jordan James Parke/Instagram


Jordan James Parke, 34, who appeared on TV’s Botched, died Feb. 18 in London. He had famously spent an estimated $150,000 to look like his idol, Kim Kardashian. The self-described “Lip King” had told British newspaper The Sun that his look was “all about the shock factor.”

Robert Duvall

Robert Duvall in 1981.

Chuck Fishman/Getty


Robert Duvall, the legendary actor who starred in films like Apocalypse Now and TV series like Lonesome Dove, died Feb. 15 at the age of 95. His wife, Luciana Pedraza, announced the news via social media, writing that the actor “passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by love and comfort.” Duvall received numerous accolades for his work, including an Academy Award, two Emmy Awards, and four Golden Globes.

Tim Very

Tim Very performing with Manchester Orchestra in 2015.

 Paul R. Giunta/WireImage


Drummer Tim Very’s bandmates in the American indie rock band Manchester Orchestra announced Very died Feb. 14 at the age of 42. No cause of death was given at the time. Very was remembered by bandmates Andy Hull, Robert McDowell, and Andy Prince as “an undeniable light that was only matched by his dedication and love for the craft that he was clearly put on earth to do.” The son of a drummer, Very played on four Manchester Orchestra albums since he joined the band in 2011.

Cass Lacelle

Cass Lacelle on ‘Grand Cayman: Secrets in Paradise’.

Disney/Jeff Daly


Cass Lacelle, who starred on the Freeform reality series Grand Cayman: Secrets in Paradise, died on Feb. 11 at 34. Born in 1991 and raised in Vancouver, Lacelle moved in 2016 to the Cayman Islands, where she founded the marketing agency Electric Media Group and eventually joined the cast of Grand Cayman, which ran for one season on Freeform in 2024.

Bud Cort

Bud Cort in ‘Harold And Maude’.

FilmPublicityArchive/United Archives via Getty


Bud Cort, the character actor who starred in Harold and Maude, died on Feb. 11 at age 77. After a small, but notable, role in Robert Altman’s M*A*S*H film, he played the lead in Brewster McCloud before headlining the quirky comedy Harold and Maude, about his character Harold’s May-December friendship-turned-romance with Ruth Gordon’s 79-year-old Holocaust survivor, Maude. Cort later appeared in Heat, Dogma, But I’m a Cheerleader, Coyote Ugly and The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou.

James Van Der Beek

James Van Der Beek in 2020.

Michael Buckner/Getty


Dawson’s Creek star James Van Der Beek died on Feb. 11 after a battle with colorectal cancer. He was 48. Van Der Beek played the lead role of Dawson Leery in the teen drama for six seasons, from 1998 to 2003, alongside Katie Holmes, Michelle Williams, and Joshua Jackson. On television, he later played a fictionalized version of himself Don’t Trust the B in Apartment 23, and made memorable appearances on shows like How I Met Your Mother, One Tree Hill, Mercy, Friends With Better Lives, Pose, andOvercompensating. He also competed on Dancing With the Stars and The Masked Singer. The father of six also starred in the films Varsity Blues, The Rules of Attraction, Texas Rangers, and Downsizing, Bad Hair, plus cameos in Scary Movie and Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back.

Blake Garrett

Blake Garrett in ‘How to Eat Fried Worms’ in 2006.

Gran Via/New Line/Imagine Ent/Walden 


Blake Garrett, who costarred in the 2006 movie How to Eat Fried Worms, which was adapted from the beloved 1973 children’s book by Thomas Rockwell, died Feb. 8. He was 33. As a child, Garrett had also toured with Barney, the iconic purple dinosaur, and appeared in Barney’s Colorful World, Live! in 2004.

Brad Arnold

Brad Arnold of 3 Doors Down performs at the Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre in Sterling Heights, Mich., on Aug. 7, 2021.

Scott Legato/Getty


Brad Arnold, the lead singer and longest-tenured founding member of the hard rock band 3 Doors Down, died at 47 on Feb. 7 following a battle with cancer. Arnold wrote the group’s biggest single, “Kryptonite,” during algebra class in his senior year of high school. The track helped launch the band’s debut album The Better Life to massive success in 2000. 3 Doors Down went on to release five more albums between 2002 and 2016, with two of them reaching the No. 1 spot on the Billboard 200 chart.

Fred Smith

Fred Smith performing with Television at the Hammersmith Odeon in London in May 1977.

Michael Putland/Getty


Fred Smith, the bassist for the rock band Television and a founding member of Blondie, died at 77 on Feb. 5. Smith was the original bassist in the first Blondie lineup, which also included Debbie Harry, Chris Stein, and Billy O’Connor, in 1974. He left the group less than a year later to replace Richard Hell in Television, who were already a mainstay at New York’s CBGB club with members Tom Verlaine, Richard Lloyd, and Billy Ficca. He provided bass and backing vocals on all three of Television’s studio albums: 1977’s Marquee Moon, 1978’s Adventure, and 1992’s Television.

Chuck Negron

Chuck Negron.

Scott Dudelson/Getty


Three Dog Night founding member Chuck Negron died at 83 on Feb. 2. The vocal trio would go on to become one of the most popular bands of the late ’60s and ’70s, recording 10 albums and releasing songs like “Joy to the World,” “One,” and “Old Fashioned Love Song,” with Negron on lead vocals. He also launched his own solo career in 1995, releasing seven albums and actively touring until the COVID-19 pandemic.

Billy Bass Nelson

Billy Bass Nelson of Parliament-Funkadelic in 1971.

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty


Parliament-Funkadelic member Billy Bass Nelson died on Jan. 31. He was 75. Nelson was recruited by George Clinton as a teen for his doo-wop band, the Parliaments. The group later took on a funkier R&B and rock sound and was branded Funkadelic by Nelson. Later, as Parliament-Funkadelic, the group was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

Catherine O’Hara

Catherine O’Hara at the Emmy Awards in 2024.

Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty


Comedy legend Catherine O’Hara, known for her roles in Home Alone, Beetlejuice, Schitt’s Creek, and several Christopher Guest mockumentaries, died on Jan. 30 at age 71. After beginning her comedy career as a member of Second City Television (SCTV) — and passing on starring on Saturday Night Live, O’Hara further made a name for herself with roles in After Hours, Heartburn, stepmother Delia Deetz in Beetlejuice and its sequel, Waiting for Guffman, Best in Show, A Mighty Wind, For Your Consideration, and, of course, the Home Alone movies. She most recently appeared in the action film Argylle, and TV shows The Last of Us and The Studio.

Sly Dunbar

Sly Dunbar in 1984.

David Corio/Getty


Sly Dunbar, a Grammy-winning reggae drummer, died on Jan. 26 at 73. As one half of the duo Sly & Robbie, along with late bassist Robbie Shakespeare, the Jamaican musicians created reggae rhythms used by the likes of Bob Marley, Mick Jagger, and Bob Dylan.

Gabe Lopez

Gabe Lopez; RuPaul on ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’.

Gabe Lopez/Instagram; MTV


Emmy-nominated RuPaul’s Drag Race crew member and songwriter Gabe Lopez died on Jan. 25 after a “brief but intense battle with lymphoma,” according to his mother. Lopez received recognition for his behind-the-scenes work mixing sound for the reality competition’s popular 2023 musical episode, “Wigloose: The Rusical!,” putting a drag spin on 1980’s classic Footloose. He also worked on Queen of the Universe, The Bitch Who Stole Christmas, Monster High: The MovieThe Other Two, and the Las Culturistas Culture Awards.

Guy Hovis

Guy Hovis with then-wife Ralna English on ‘The Lawrence Welk Show’.

Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty


Guy Hovis, a musician who frequently appeared on The Lawrence Welk Show, died on Jan. 22. He was 84. Hovis performed numerous times on the popular musical variety show alongside then-wife Ralna English, beginning in 1969 and throughout the 1970s.

Francis Buchholz

Francis Buchholz and Rudolph Schenker of Scorpions in 1984.

Paul Natkin/Getty


Bassist Francis Buchholz, a member of German rock band Scorpions, died on Jan. 22 of cancer. He was 71. Buchholz played with the band behind hits like “Rock You Like a Hurricane” and “Wind of Change” for nearly two decades.

Jardyn ‘Pee Wee’ Walker

Jardyn ‘Pee Wee’ Walker.

Zeus


Former reality TV star Jardyn Walker was found shot to death in Missouri on Jan. 21. He was 23. Under the nickname “Pee Wee,” Walker was a contestant on Zeus Network reality dating series Two Ways With Erica Mena, featuring Love & Hip Hop: New York and Atlanta alum Erica Mena looking for love. Walker placed fourth overall on the competition in 2025.

Kevin Johnson

Defensive lineman Kevin Johnson plays with the Philadelphia Eagles in 1995.

George Gojkovich/Getty


Former NFL player Kevin Johnson was found dead on Jan. 21 from blunt head trauma and stab wounds. He was 55. Johnson played as a defensive lineman for the Philadelphia Eagles and the then-Oakland Raiders in the 1990s.

Rob Hirst

Rob Hirst of Ghostrighters and Midnight Oil performs in 2007.

Gaye Gerard/Getty


Midnight Oil co-founder and drummer Rob Hirst died on Jan. 20 after a battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 70. Hirst helped write many of the Aussie band’s hit songs, including “Beds Are Burning,” “Blue Sky Mine,” “Forgotten Years,” “The Dead Heart,” and “King of the Mountain.”

Kim Vō

Kim Vō in 2009.

Isaac Brekken/WireImage


Celebrity hairstylist and reality TV star Kim Vō died on Jan. 19 after an eight-year battle with colorectal cancer. He was 55. In addition to serving as a popular colorist and hairstylist for the Hollywood elite, Vō served as a judge on Bravo’s Shear Genius and starred on Paramount+’s Blowing LA.

Valentino Garavani

Valentino Garavani with Meryl Streep in ‘The Devil Wears Prada’.

20th Century Fox


Fashion designer Valentino Garavani, founder of the Valentino brand, who also appeared in The Devil Wears Prada, died on Jan. 19 at his home in Rome. He was 93. The fashion visionary founded his namesake brand in 1960, gaining widespread popularity thanks to former first lady Jackie Kennedy wearing his designs. Garavani appeared in 2006’s The Devil Wears Prada alongside Meryl Streep and Anne Hathaway. He also appeared in the feature documentary about his life, Valentino: The Last Emperor, before his 2008 retirement.

Roger Allers

Roger Allers in 2023.

Phillip Faraone/Getty


Animator, screenwriter, and filmmaker Roger Allers died on Jan. 17. He was 76. Allers co-directed 1994’s animated blockbuster The Lion King, and later co-wrote the libretto for the movie’s Broadway musical adaptation, which was nominated for Best Book of a Musical at the 1998 Tony Awards. He also worked on films like Beauty and the BeastAladdin, and Lilo & Stitch as an animator, storyboard artist, and story editor.

Bruce Bilson

Bruce Bilson with granddaughter Rachel Bilson in 2004.

Frederick M. Brown/Getty


Emmy-winning TV director Bruce Bilson died on Jan. 16 at 97. Bilson, grandfather of actress Rachel Bilson, directed episodes of hit TV series, including The Andy Griffith Show, Get Smart, The Patty Duke Show, The Odd Couple, and Hogan’s Heroes.

Kianna Underwood

Kianna Underwood on ‘All That’.

Nickelodeon


Former child actress Kianna Underwood, best known for costarring on Nickelodeon’s All That, died on Jan. 16, after being struck in a hit-and-run in New York. She was 33. Underwood appeared on the 10th season of the Nickelodeon kids’ sketch show that originally starred Amanda Bynes and Kenan Thompson. She also appeared in 1999’s The 24 Hour Woman, was cast in the original national tour of Hairspray, and did voice work on Bill Cosby’s animated show Little Bill and 2001 TV movie Santa, Baby.

Kenny Morris

Siouxsie & the Banshees members Steve Severin, Siouxsie Sioux, John McKay, and Kenny Morris.

Fin Costello/Redferns


Drummer Kenny Morris, a member of Siouxsie and the Banshees, died on Jan. 15. He was 68. Morris played on the influential goth rock band’s first two albums.

Scott Adams

Cartoonist Scott Adams poses with a life-sized cutout of his Dilbert character in 2014.

Lea Suzuki/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty


Cartoonist and Dilbert creator Scott Adams died on Jan. 13 after a battle with prostate cancer. He was 68. Adams created his defining comic strip in 1989, satirizing white collar work life. After finding mainstream success throughout the 1990s, Dilbert was dropped from newspapers across the U.S. in 2023 after its creator’s racist comments, calling Black people a “hate group” and advising white people to “get the f— away” from them.

John Forté

John Forté in 2025.

Theo Wargo/Getty 


John Forté, a Grammy-nominated musician and producer who was a close collaborator with the Fugees, was found dead at his Massachusetts home on Jan. 12. He was 50. Forté helped produce and write two songs, “Cowboys” and “Family Business,” on the influential hip-hop group’s chart-topping 1996 album, “The Score.” He also helped work on songs for Wyclef Jean’s debut solo album, Wyclef Jean Presents the Carnival, before making his own album, Poly Sci, working with Jean and fellow Fugee Pras.

Matt Kwasniewski-Kelvin

Matt Kwasniewski-Kelvin of Black Midi.

Jim Bennett/WireImage; Travis P Ball/Getty


Matt Kwasniewski-Kelvin, a co-founder and guitarist for British rock band Black Midi, died at age 26, his family announced on Jan. 12. The band released their debut album, Schlagenheim, in 2019, and was nominated for the Mercury Prize that same year. He stepped away from the group in 2021.

Yeison Jiménez

Yeison Jimenez performing in Miami on Oct. 7, 2023.

Johnny Louis/Getty


Colombian singer-songwriter Yeison Jiménez died on Jan. 10 in a plane crash, just hours before he was scheduled to perform. He was 34. The musician was one of the region’s biggest names in pop music, or “música popular,” a genre that blends traditional Mexican ranchera music with Colombian roots. Jiménez, who broke through with the 2013 track Te Deseo Lo Mejor, released eight albums over his lifetime.

Bob Weir

Bob Weir performing with the Grateful Dead in 1981.

Clayton Call/Redferns


Legendary Grateful Dead co-founder and rock guitarist Bob Weir died on Jan. 10 due to underlying lung issues after previously beating cancer, according to his daughter. He was 78. Weir and fellow guitarist Jerry Garcia formed the legendary jam band in 1965 with bassist Phil Lesh, keyboardist Ron “Pigpen” McKernan, and drummer Bill Kreutzmann. Weir wrote or co-wrote the lyrics to some of the band’s most famous tunes, including “Truckin’,” “Sugar Magnolia,” “Cassidy,” and “Throwing Stones.” He spent the next six decades touring, including three with the Dead, who became one of the highest-grossing American touring acts.

T.K. Carter

T.K. Carter in 2016.

Desiree Stone/Getty 


Character actor T.K. Carter, best known for Punky Brewster and The Thing, died on Jan. 9 in his home. He was 69. Carter landed one of his most memorable roles in John Carpenter’s 1982 sci-fi classic The Thing, as Nauls, the roller-skating cook aboard the Antarctic research station. He also played popular teacher Mike Fulton on Punky Brewster. Carter also appeared on Good Morning, Miss Bliss, Dave, The Steve Harvey Show, The Sinbad Show, A Different WorldFamily MattersNYPD BlueEverybody Hates Chris, and How to Get Away with Murder. Carter’s final film role came in 2020’s The Way Back, starring Ben Affleck.

Guy Moon

Nickelodeon composer Guy Moon.

Guy Moon/Facebook


Emmy-nominated composer Guy Moon, who wrote music for Nickelodeon hits like The Fairly OddParents, Danny Phantom, and SpongeBob SquarePants, died on Jan. 8 from injuries sustained in a car accident. He was 63. Moon also served as a music writer for Big Time Rush, Back at the Barnyard, and The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy. On the big screen, he composed scores for The Brady Bunch Movie and its sequel, and contributed to the soundtracks for Minority ReportFight Club, and Mystic Pizza.

Béla Tarr

Béla Tarr at the Filmoteca de Catalunya in 2024.

David Zorrakino/Europa Press via Getty 


Hungarian filmmaker Béla Tarr, known for films like Sátántangó and Damnation, died on Jan. 6 at age 70. Recognized as a pioneer of the slow cinema movement, Tarr wrote and directed nine feature films throughout his career, beginning with his 1979 feature debut Family Nest, which won the Grand Prix at the Mannheim Film Festival, to 2011’s The Turin Horse.

Elle Simone Scott

Elle Simone Scott in 2022.

Dave Kotinsky/Getty


America’s Test Kitchen host Elle Simone Scott died on Jan. 5 after a long battle with ovarian cancer. She was 49. In addition to serving as the first Black woman to be a regular host of the hit PBS show, Scott authored bestselling cookbooks and hosted The Walk-In podcast.

Bret Hanna-Shuford

Bret Shuford and husband Stephen Hanna in 2023.

Slaven Vlasic/Getty


Broadway actor and influencer Bret Hanna-Shuford died on Jan. 3 of an aggressive form of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis and peripheral T-cell lymphoma (PTCL). He was 46. An actor in Broadway’s Beauty and the Beast and The Little Mermaid, he was also one-half of the popular social media account Broadway Husbands, along with his spouse, Stephen Hanna-Shuford.

Sidney Kibrick

Sidney Kibrick in ‘Our Gang’ circa 1935.

Silver Screen Collection/Getty


Former Our Gang child star Sidney Kibrick died Jan. 3. He was 97. Kibrick appeared in dozens of Little Rascals shorts in the 1930s and 1940s, first as unnamed children before turning up regularly as the character Woim, the sidekick of Tommy Bond’s bully Butch. He retired from Hollywood as a teenager.

Victoria Jones

Victoria Jones with dad Tommy Lee Jones at the Cannes Film Festival in 2014.

Stephane Cardinale/Corbis via Getty


Actress Victoria Jones, the daughter of Oscar-winning actor Tommy Lee Jones, was found dead in a San Francisco hotel room on Jan. 1. She was 34. The actress appeared in her father’s films Men in Black II, The Homesman, and The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada, as well as the Robin Wright-starring Sorry, Haters, and an episode of the TV series One Tree Hill.





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