Michael Madsen, the actor best known for his reserved but imposing roles in Quentin Tarantino films, died Thursday at age 67.
Madsen died from cardiac arrest at his home in Malibu, Calif., according to KNBC. He was found unresponsive in the home Thursday morning.
“In the last two years Michael Madsen has been doing some incredible work with independent film,” said his representatives Susan Ferris, Ron Smith and Liz Rodriguez. He “was really looking forward to this next chapter in his life.”
Madsen compiled an extensive resume as a talented character actor, but his biggest and most memorable films were all collaborations with Tarantino. He starred as the terrifying “Mr. Blonde” in “Reservoir Dogs,” the brooding gunslinger Joe Gage in “The Hateful Eight” and in “Kill Bill” as a target of the main character’s revenge spree.
But those weren’t Madsen’s only significant pictures, as he also appeared in “Thelma & Louise,” “Donnie Brasco” and the 2002 Bond film “Die Another Day.” In total, his IMDb page lists him with 346 acting credits, though he wasn’t always proud of them.

“You get these horrifying straight-to-video things for very little money, then you go to the Cannes Film Festival and they got some poster of you, 40 feet high, in the worst movie in the world,” Madsen told the Guardian in 2004. “You’re like, ‘Oh my God. Take the f–king thing down!’”
Born in Chicago on Sept. 25, 1957, Madsen wasn’t initially drawn to show business even though his mother, Elaine, was an Emmy-winning producer. Among his early jobs, Madsen was a car mechanic, a paramedic and a landscaper.
But with such defining features and a memorable personality, Madsen eventually found his way to the stage for a brief time, and then to the screen for a much longer one. He first got noticed for his role in “Thelma & Louise,” as Louise’s loyal boyfriend Jimmy.
His next big role, in 1992’s “Reservoir Dogs,” became the defining moment of his career, with Madsen playing Mr. Blonde, the loose cannon in a robbery group. A scene in which he danced around an empty room to “Stuck in the Middle With You” before cutting off a captive man’s ear became the iconic image of the film.
But despite seeming destined for stardom, Madsen instead fell off the scene and found himself in many (many, many) B-movies, and was once described by the Guardian as “a typecast rent-a-heavy.”
“Some of them I’m only in for 10 minutes, but they bought my name, and they bought my face to put on the DVD box with a gun,” he told The Independent in 2015. “When people offered me work, it wasn’t always the best, but I had to buy groceries, and I had to put gas in the car.”
Though Madsen’s work included a couple notable parts — as mobster Sunny Black in “Donnie Brasco” for one — he made few star turns outside of his work with Tarantino.
In multiple interviews, Madsen speculated that perhaps he was born too late to be an A-lister. With his lantern jaw and straight-shooting style, he figured he could have been a star in the 1960s.
“I’m a bit of a throwback to the days of black-and-white movies,” he told the Guardian. “Those guys back then, they had a certain kind of directness about them.”
Madsen eventually found peace with being known as “Mr. Blonde from ‘Reservoir Dogs,’” as he was once introduced before throwing out the first pitch at a Chicago Cubs game.
‘I was like, ‘Why did he have to say that?! I’ve done some other stuff!’” Madsen told the Independent. “But then again, I can think of some pretty big-name actors who never had a role like that.”
Madsen is survived by four children, including his son Christian, who is also an actor. He was predeceased by one of his sons, Hudson, who died by suicide in 2022.
Madsen died from cardiac arrest at his home in Malibu, Calif., according to his representatives.
Michael Madsen, the actor best known for his reserved but imposing roles in Quentin Tarantino films, died Thursday at age 67.
Madsen died from cardiac arrest at his home in Malibu, Calif., according to KNBC. He was found unresponsive in the home Thursday morning.
“In the last two years Michael Madsen has been doing some incredible work with independent film,” said his representatives Susan Ferris, Ron Smith and Liz Rodriguez. He “was really looking forward to this next chapter in his life.”
Madsen compiled an extensive resume as a talented character actor, but his biggest and most memorable films were all collaborations with Tarantino. He starred as the terrifying “Mr. Blonde” in “Reservoir Dogs,” the brooding gunslinger Joe Gage in “The Hateful Eight” and in “Kill Bill” as a target of the main character’s revenge spree.
But those weren’t Madsen’s only significant pictures, as he also appeared in “Thelma & Louise,” “Donnie Brasco” and the 2002 Bond film “Die Another Day.” In total, his IMDb page lists him with 346 acting credits, though he wasn’t always proud of them.
“You get these horrifying straight-to-video things for very little money, then you go to the Cannes Film Festival and they got some poster of you, 40 feet high, in the worst movie in the world,” Madsen told the Guardian in 2004. “You’re like, ‘Oh my God. Take the f–king thing down!’”
Born in Chicago on Sept. 25, 1957, Madsen wasn’t initially drawn to show business even though his mother, Elaine, was an Emmy-winning producer. Among his early jobs, Madsen was a car mechanic, a paramedic and a landscaper.
But with such defining features and a memorable personality, Madsen eventually found his way to the stage for a brief time, and then to the screen for a much longer one. He first got noticed for his role in “Thelma & Louise,” as Louise’s loyal boyfriend Jimmy.
His next big role, in 1992’s “Reservoir Dogs,” became the defining moment of his career, with Madsen playing Mr. Blonde, the loose cannon in a robbery group. A scene in which he danced around an empty room to “Stuck in the Middle With You” before cutting off a captive man’s ear became the iconic image of the film.
But despite seeming destined for stardom, Madsen instead fell off the scene and found himself in many (many, many) B-movies, and was once described by the Guardian as “a typecast rent-a-heavy.”
“Some of them I’m only in for 10 minutes, but they bought my name, and they bought my face to put on the DVD box with a gun,” he told The Independent in 2015. “When people offered me work, it wasn’t always the best, but I had to buy groceries, and I had to put gas in the car.”
Though Madsen’s work included a couple notable parts — as mobster Sunny Black in “Donnie Brasco” for one — he made few star turns outside of his work with Tarantino.
In multiple interviews, Madsen speculated that perhaps he was born too late to be an A-lister. With his lantern jaw and straight-shooting style, he figured he could have been a star in the 1960s.
“I’m a bit of a throwback to the days of black-and-white movies,” he told the Guardian. “Those guys back then, they had a certain kind of directness about them.”
Madsen eventually found peace with being known as “Mr. Blonde from ‘Reservoir Dogs,’” as he was once introduced before throwing out the first pitch at a Chicago Cubs game.
‘I was like, ‘Why did he have to say that?! I’ve done some other stuff!’” Madsen told the Independent. “But then again, I can think of some pretty big-name actors who never had a role like that.”
Madsen is survived by four children, including his son Christian, who is also an actor. He was predeceased by one of his sons, Hudson, who died by suicide in 2022.
RevContent Feed