Actor Julian McMahon, who was identified for taking part in Dr. Doom within the early-2000s “Incredible 4” motion pictures and starring in fan-favorite reveals together with “Nip/Tuck” and “Charmed,” has died. He was 56.
McMahon “died peacefully this week after a valiant effort to beat most cancers,” his spouse, Kelly McMahon, mentioned in a press release.
“Julian liked life. He liked his household. He liked his associates. He liked his work, and he liked his followers,” she mentioned. “His deepest want was to deliver pleasure into as many lives as potential.”
“We ask for help throughout this time to permit our household to grieve in privateness,” she added. “And we want for all of these to whom Julian introduced pleasure, to proceed to seek out pleasure in life. We’re grateful for the reminiscences.”
McMahon’s demise was additionally confirmed in a Fb submit by the “Nip/Tuck” sequence, which was created by famend tv author Ryan Murphy.
“Warner Bros. Tv mourns the lack of our pal Julian McMahon,” the sequence mentioned in a submit accompanied by a photograph of McMahon. “Our ideas are along with his household, associates, colleagues, and followers.”
McMahon’s function as Dr. Christian Troy in “Nip/Tuck” earned him a Golden Globe nomination for finest actor in a tv drama sequence. The sequence aired on FX from 2003 to 2010, whereas McMahon additionally starred in two of the “Incredible 4” motion pictures, “Incredible 4” and “Incredible 4: Rise of the Silver Surfer.”
McMahon’s profession took off within the supernatural TV sequence “Charmed,” which he co-starred in with Shannen Doherty and Alyssa Milano from 2000 to 2005.
Milano shared a picture of McMahon and her on Instagram on Friday, calling him a “pricey pal” and saying she was “heartbroken” by his loss.
“He made me really feel protected as an actor. Seen as a girl. He challenged me, teased me, supported me,” she mentioned. “We have been so completely different, and but in some way we all the time understood one another.”
The Hollywood star was born in Sydney, Australia, on July 27, 1968, and hailed from well-known mother and father.
His father, William McMahon, was the prime minister of Australia from 1971 to 1972, and his mom was Sonia McMahon, an Australian socialite and style icon.
In an interview with Jimmy Kimmel in 2007, McMahon mentioned he didn’t bear in mind a lot from his father’s days as Australia’s chief due to his younger age.
“It’s a little bit completely different there as a result of Australia’s a smaller nation. It was the ’70s. Every little thing wasn’t so public,” he mentioned. “It was a little bit simpler. You weren’t rising up within the highlight. Paparazzi wasn’t following you round.”
In 2018, McMahon returned to Australia to star in a comedy-drama movie, “Swinging Safari,” alongside Australian star Kylie Minogue. Minogue was McMahon’s former sister-in-law from McMahon’s first marriage to Minogue’s youthful sister, Dannii Minogue, within the Nineteen Nineties.
McMahon may need drawn on his scant reminiscences of his father’s premiership for one in all his closing roles, taking part in Australia’s prime minister within the homicide thriller sequence “The Residence,” which premiered on Netflix this 12 months.
Along with his spouse, Kelly McMahon, whom he married in 2014, McMahon leaves behind a daughter, Madison, from a earlier marriage to mannequin Brooke Burns.