Wednesday, June 3, 2026, began with a routine morning call for West Los Angeles police officers. An “unknown” incident on Erwin Street in the Tarzana neighborhood. What they found upon arrival was an 81-year-old man unconscious in the front yard of a home with a stab wound to the chest . He was taken to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The victim was James Handy, an actor with a fifty-year career, most of whom remember him as an extra or supporting role, but who appeared in more than 100 film and television projects .
The 911 call that led officers to the home had a grisly quality that the investigation has yet to explain. “I’m the son of man, I just killed the man of sin,” the caller said. The suspect — who signaled to the arriving officers that he was the one they were looking for — was identified as Michael Glendhill , 44, the son of Handy’s partner, with whom the actor shared the same residence. He was arrested at the scene, booked into the Van Nuys County Jail on a charge of murder , and his bail was set at $2 million . Authorities have not released a motive.
“It is with the deepest sadness that I can confirm that the man fatally shot was actor James Handy,” a spokesman for the actor said, confirming what Hollywood had been learning by the hour. Police have said it was an isolated incident with no threat to public safety — but that clarification does not diminish the tragic nature of the death of an actor who reached the age of 81 with one of the most extensive film credits of his generation.
James Handy was born in New York and made his screen debut in 1977. In an era when cinema has learned to value actors who fill every scene they step into, even with just a few minutes of presence, Handy was a face that viewers recognized without always knowing his name. The bartender in “ Top Gun: Maverick ” in 2022, the film that broke box office records that summer and became one of Tom Cruise’s biggest box office successes — he was. His presence , even if secondary, was memorable.
Shortly before, in 2017 , in “ Logan ”, he played the doctor who treated Hugh Jackman in the role of the aging Wolverine, a film considered one of the best of its kind and which had garnered excellent reviews for the maturity of its narrative. Earlier, in 1995 ’s “Jumanji” , he played the insect exterminator, one of those roles that are part of the cinematic childhood of an entire generation. In “Arachnophobia” , Milton Briggs, the character he played, remained unforgettable for film fans. The list does not stop there: “The Rocketeer” , “Brighton Beach Memoirs” , “The Verdict” , “K-9”. Decades of cinematic presence in productions that marked the entertainment industry.
On television , Handy had carved out an equally solid presence. Arthur Devlin on the series “Alias” was one of his most recognizable roles on the small screen. Also a face on “Melrose Place” and “NYPD Blue” — two series that defined the television aesthetic of the ’90s — he completed a television presence that, combined with his film work, is a rare example of consistency and professionalism. According to IMDB, Handy has more than 100 film and television credits in a career that spans several decades.
These numbers don’t capture how often someone sees an actor and thinks “I’ve seen that before” without being able to name him. Handy was one of those “character” actors who make every movie more convincing, every scene more natural — without claiming a leading role, without needing the spotlight. Hollywood is built on people like him.
His death, violent, unexpected and with unexplained elements in the only sentence the suspect said to 911, leaves open questions about the motives and circumstances. The police continue the investigation. What remains closed now, and irrevocable, is a fifty-year career that began in New York, crossed the big screen and the small, touched generations of viewers and ended in a yard in Tarzana on a Wednesday morning.