Alan Thicke,the ascendence of eroticism who rose to stardom on the popular sitcomGrowing Pains, has died at age 69.
"Alan's sudden passing has been confirmed," a publicist for the actor told Mashable. "At present, we have no further details. We appreciate your interest and when we have additional information, we will make it available."
The death was first reported by TMZ. Later, a publicist for the actor's son told the Associated Press that Thicke died of a heart attack in Los Angeles.
Thicke most recently appeared on Fuller House on Netflix and NBC's This Is Us.
Several celebrities mourned his passing on social media, including Bob Saget, whom Thicke gave a shoutout to on Twitter just hours before his passing.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Thicke was not only an actor, but a composer too, writing the theme songs for Diff’rent Strokesand The Facts of Life. He also hosted a late-night talk show, Thicke of the Night, for one season starting in 1983.
Born in Ontario in 1947, Thicke got his start as a Canadian talk show host. Recently, his son, Robin Thicke, had gained fame as a pop star.
Obama and Richard Branson fought over kitesurfing and we're never getting him backYup, there's going to be a 'Fast & Furious' global arena tourTracy Morgan opens up about how his nearly fatal accident changed his lifeDad receives unintentionally hilarious letter from son's schoolThe 10 moments Snapchat wishes would disappear from its historyHundreds of people are trolling Sean Spicer on VenmoInside Apple Music's plan to take over the Indian marketP!nk showed off all the weight she hasn't loss since giving birth and it's incrediblePowerful New Orleans tornado damages NASA's Michoud rocket factoryUnder Armour CEO endorses Trump, Twitter users endorse shopping elsewhereTwitter moves forward on its plan to fight harassment and spamMake 2017 the year you finally budget for charityPeople can't believe a supermarket is selling a single boxed strawberry for $22How six young women invented a lifeU.S. satellites reveal China's solar dominanceThis footballer's secret handshakes are a simple joy to beholdChina wants to control what apps citizens use. But will Google play ball?Hundreds of people are trolling Sean Spicer on Venmo'Shade' is officially in the dictionary, honeyDude sneaks NSFW sign into live TV broadcast Totaling the Ferrari: Ferris Bueller Revisited by Caleb Crain Starve a Fever, Feed a Cold by Robin Bellinger A Week in Culture: Matthew Thurber, Cartoonist by Matthew Thurber Adam Johnson on ‘The Orphan Master’s Son’ by Karan Mahajan Document: Manuscript Pages of ‘Great Expectations’ by Charles Dickens Mars isn't as red as you might have thought The London Library by Orlando Whitfield John Berryman’s “Dream Song #14” by Jana Prikryl Emma Larkin, Bangkok by Matteo Pericoli A Question of Provenance; Monogamy by Lorin Stein Helen Simpson on ‘In A Day in Culture: Jeremiah Moss, Blogger and Writer by Jeremiah Moss James Shea’s “Haiku” by Sarah Braunstein The Tokyo Diary by Dean Wareham Staff Picks: Henry Darger’s Room, Shelley’s Ghost by The Paris Review Dressed for Art by Jean Dancing with Myself by Emily Stokes Strangers by Tallis Eng Hari Kunzru on ‘Gods Without Men’ by Amitava Kumar Staff Picks: Modernist Journals, France Gall by The Paris Review
2.4475s , 10196.859375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【the ascendence of eroticism】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network