LOS ANGELES, California (CNN)  -- Actor Henry Gibson, who played roles
ranging from loopy poets to vengeful Illinois Nazis and cranky judges
during a 40-year film and television career, has died at age 73, his
representatives said Wednesday.

Gibson was a regular on "Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In," where he was
known for popping up to read short, humorous poems during the show's
1968-71 run.

He was a frequent guest star on television shows from the 1970s through
the mid-2000s, with a recurring role as a judge on ABC's "Boston Legal"
as late as 2008.

His movie roles included turns in two of director Robert Altman's 1970s
films, "Nashville" and "The Long Goodbye," and as the neo-Nazi leader
pursuing John Belushi and Dan Ackroyd in "The Blues Brothers."

No details of his death were immediately available, said Peter Gross, a
spokesman Talentworks LA, which represented Gibson.

http://www.cnn.com/2009/SHOWBIZ/TV/09/16/obit.henry.gibson/index.html

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