According to The Associated Press, his agent, John S. Kelly, said Mr.  Nielsen died at a hospital near his home in Fort Lauderdale where he was  being treated for pneumonia.
Mr. Nielsen, a tall man with a  matinee-idol profile, was often cast as an earnest hero at the beginning  of his film career, in the 1950s.
His best-known roles included  the stalwart spaceship captain in the science fiction classic “Forbidden  Planet” (1956), the wealthy, available Southern aristocrat in “Tammy  and the Bachelor” (1957) and an ocean liner captain faced with disaster  in “The Poseidon Adventure” (1972).
In the 1960s and ’70s, as his  hair turned white and he became an even more distinguished figure, Mr.  Nielsen played serious military men, government leaders and even a mob  boss, appearing in crime dramas, westerns and the occasional horror  movie.
Then, in the low-budget, big-money-making 1980  disaster-movie parody “Airplane!” he was cast as a clueless doctor on  board a possibly doomed jetliner. Critics and audiences alike praised  his deadpan comic delivery, and his career was reborn.
“Airplane!” was followed by a television series, “Police Squad!” (1982), from the film’s director-writers.
It  lasted only six episodes, but Mr. Nielsen, his goofy character, Lt.  Frank Drebin, and the creators went on to three successful feature-film  spinoffs.
The first, “The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police  Squad!” (1988), was followed by “The Naked Gun 2 ½: The Smell of Fear”  (1991) and “The Naked Gun 33 1/3: The Final Insult” (1994), whose cast  included Priscilla Presley, O. J. Simpson and Anna Nicole Smith.
Other  filmmakers cast Mr. Nielsen in a variety of comedies, including  “Repossessed” (1990), an “Exorcist” spoof with Linda Blair; “Dracula:  Dead and Loving It” (1995); “Spy Hard” (1996); and “2001: A Space  Travesty” (2000).
None were received as well as the “Naked Gun”  films, but Mr. Nielsen found a new continuing role as the paranoid,  out-of-control president of the United States in “Scary Movie 3” (2003)  and “Scary Movie 4” (2006).
In keeping with his adopted comic  persona, when Mr. Nielsen in 1993 published an autobiography, “Naked  Truth,” it was one that cheerfully, blatantly fabricated events in his  life.
They included two Academy Awards, an affair with Elizabeth  Taylor and a stay at a rehabilitation center, battling dopey-joke  addiction.
In real life he was nominated twice for Emmy Awards,  in 1982 as outstanding lead actor in a comedy series for “Police Squad!”  and in 1988 as outstanding guest actor in a comedy series for an  episode of “Day by Day,” an NBC sitcom about yuppies and day care.
Off screen, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada, the country’s highest civilian honor, in 2002.
Leslie William Nielsen was born on Feb. 11, 1926, in Regina, Saskatchewan.
The  son of a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police of Danish heritage  and a Welsh mother, he grew up in the Northwest Territories and in  Edmonton, Alberta, where he graduated from high school. Jean Hersholt,  the Danish-born actor and humanitarian, was an uncle.
Mr. Nielsen  enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force before his 18th birthday and  trained as an aerial gunner during World War II, but he was never sent  overseas.
He began his career in radio in Calgary, Alberta, then  studied at the Academy of Studio Arts in Toronto and at the Neighborhood  Playhouse in New York. This led him to his television debut, in a 1950  episode of “Actors Studio,” an anthology series on CBS.
By the  time Mr. Nielsen made his film debut, in 1956, he had made scores of  appearances in series and performed in one Broadway play, “Seagulls Over  Sorrento” in 1952, as a tyrannical navy petty officer.
He continued to make guest appearances in television series throughout his career, and with great regularity through the 1970s.
And he did stage work, touring North America and Britain in a one-man show about the crusading lawyer Clarence Darrow.
His final projects included “Lipshitz Saves the World” (2007), an NBC movie comedy, and “Scary Movie 5,” to be released.
Mr.  Nielsen married four times. His first wife (1950-56) was Monica Boyer;  his second (1958-73) was Alisande Ullman, with whom he had two  daughters; and his third (1981-83) was Brooks Oliver. Those marriages  ended in divorce.
In 2001 he married Barbaree Earl; a resident of  Fort Lauderdale, she survives him, as do his daughters, Maura Nielsen  Kaplan and Thea Nielsen Disney.
His elder brother, Erik Nielsen, who was deputy prime minister of Canada from 1984 to 1986, died in 2008.
In  a 1988 interview with The New York Times, Leslie Nielsen discussed his  career-rejuvenating transition to comedy, a development that he had  recently described as “too good to be true.”
“It’s been dawning  on me slowly that for the past 35 years I have been cast against type,”  he said, “and I’m finally getting to do what I really wanted to do.”
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Leslie Nielsen Actor Dies at 84 I leslie nielsen dead
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