'Night Court' Star Charlie Robinson Dead At 75

His many credits ranged from stage productions of “Driving Miss Daisy” and “Fences” to films like “Secret Santa” and “Miss Lettie and Me.”
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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Charlie Robinson, the versatile and prolific actor whose many credits ranged from stage productions of “Driving Miss Daisy” and “Fences” to such films as “Secret Santa” and “Miss Lettie and Me” to his long-running role as the court clerk Mac Robinson in the sitcom “Night Court,” has died. He was 75.

Robinson died Sunday at the Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles, according to his manager, Lisa DiSante-Frank. The cause was cardiac arrest with multisystem organ failures due to septic shock, and metastatic adenocarcinoma.

“Charlie Robinson, was the love of my life, husband, father, grandfather, and great grandfather,” his wife and fellow actor Dolorita Noonan-Robinson said in a statement. “He was truly the working actor’s actor, and of all his passions, his craft took center stage, with his family being the wind beneath his wings, so he could soar to unbelievable heights! On behalf of my husband and family, I thank you for being a part of the audience.”

The cast of "Night Court": (l-r) John Larroquette as Dan Fielding, Markie Post as Christine Sullivan, Richard Moll as Nostradamus 'Bull' Shannon, Harry Anderson as Judge Harry T. Stone, Charles Robinson as Mac Robinson and Marsha Warfield as Rosalind 'Roz' Russell.
The cast of "Night Court": (l-r) John Larroquette as Dan Fielding, Markie Post as Christine Sullivan, Richard Moll as Nostradamus 'Bull' Shannon, Harry Anderson as Judge Harry T. Stone, Charles Robinson as Mac Robinson and Marsha Warfield as Rosalind 'Roz' Russell.
NBC via Getty Images

Charlie Robinson was a Houston native who in his teens sang with a local group that later became known nationally, Archie Bell and the Drells. His acting career started in the late 1960s when he joined the Houston-based school Studio 7. He made his film debut with a brief role in “Drive, He Said,” a 1971 release directed by Jack Nicholson, and worked steadily over the next 50 years. Besides “Night Court,” which ran from 1984-1992, he also appeared in the acclaimed, but short-lived “Buffalo Bill”; “Home Improvement”; “The Game” and “Hart of Dixie” among other series.

Recent credits include the teleplay “Some Old Black Man” and the stage play “The Last Romance,” in which he appeared with Michael Learned.

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