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        <title><![CDATA[Hugh Keays-Byrne, actor behind Immortan Joe in &#x27;Mad Max: Fury Road,&#x27; dies at 73]]></title>
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        <link>https://usagag.com/2020/12/02/hugh-keays-byrne-actor-behind-immortan-joe-in-x27-mad-max-fury-road-x27-dies-at-73/</link>
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            <media:title type="html">Hugh Keays-Byrne, actor behind Immortan Joe in &#x27;Mad Max: Fury Road,&#x27; dies at 73</media:title>
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                            <strong>Mad Max: Fury Road            </strong>
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                  <p>Hugh Keays-Byrne, the Anglo-Australian actor behind Immortan Joe in 2015&apos;s <em><strong>Mad Max: Fury Road</strong></em>, died Tuesday during a hospital stay, according to his friend and former movie director Brian Trenchard-Smith. </p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p>A rep for Keays-Byrne confirmed to EW that he died peacefully and that his family requests privacy at this time. He was 73. </p>
                
                          
                  <p>Trenchard-Smith helmed Keays-Byrne in films like 1975&apos;s <em>The Dragon Flies</em>, a.k.a. <em>The Man From Hong Kong</em>. Afterwards, the actor became &quot;a good friend&quot; to him and wife Margaret for 46 years, as the filmmaker wrote in a Facebook post on Wednesday. &quot;We spent many happy Sunday mornings with him, his partner Christina, and a group of fellow actors and artists (the Macao Light Company) at the house they shared in Centennial Park,&quot; he wrote. </p>
                
                          
                   
                
                          
                  <p>Trenchard-Smith mentioned the &quot;innate sense of humor&quot; Keays-Byrne brought with him to every production. &quot;Hugh had a generous heart, offering a helping hand to people in need, or a place to stay to a homeless teenager. He cared about social justice and preserving the environment long before these issues became fashionable,&quot; Trenchard-Smith continued. &quot;His life was governed by his sense of the oneness of humanity. We will miss his example and his friendship.&quot;</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p>No other information surrounding his death was given. </p>
                
                            
                          
                  <p>Keays-Byrne&apos;s <em><strong>Mad Max</strong></em> legacy extends beyond <em>Fury Road</em> &#x2014; about 36 years before that when he debuted in the film series&apos; first movie in 1979 as Toecutter, the main antagonist as the head of a motorcycle gang terrorizing the outback. </p>
                
                          
                   
                
                          
                  <p>On returning for <em>Fury Road</em> as the raging tyrannical lord of his Citadel, he told <em><strong>The New York Times</strong></em> earlier this year, &quot;It was a wonderful thing to feel everyone around me crashing about in their costumes and absolutely living it.&quot;</p>
                
                          
                  <p>Miller recalled in a 2015 interview with <em><strong>USA Today</strong></em> that he brought Keays-Byrne back partly because an early print of the first Mad Max had a bad American dub of the actor&apos;s voice. &quot;I always felt so guilty about that,&quot; Miller said. &quot;I thought I had to make up for it in some way.&quot;</p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p>&quot;It&apos;s a sad day to have to say goodbye to The Toecutter and Immortan Joe,&quot; filmmaker Edgar Wright tweeted. &quot;RIP Hugh Keays-Bryne [sic], who played indelible baddies in the first and last Mad Max films&#x2014;36 years apart.&quot; </p>
                
                            
                          
                  <p>Born May 18, 1947 in Srinagar, Keays-Byrne and his British parents moved to England when he was child. He began his career as a stage actor, joining the Royal Shakespeare Company in productions of <em>As You Like It</em>, <em>Hamlet</em>, <em>King Lear</em>, <em>Much Ado About Nothing</em>, <em>The Tempest</em>, and more. His television career began in 1967 with <em>Bellbird</em> and <em>Boy Meets Girl</em>, and his film roles kicked off with 1974&apos;s <em>Stone</em>. </p>
                
                            
                    
                  
                          
                  <p>Keays-Byrne would later appear in as Mr. Stubb in 1998&apos;s <em>Moby Dick</em>, the character Grunchlk in episodes of <em>Farscape</em>, and in a minor role for 2011&apos;s <em>Sleeping Beauty</em>. <em>Mad Max: Fury Road</em> was his final film role. </p>
                
                          
                  <p><strong>Related content:</strong></p>
                
                          
                  <ul><li><strong><em>Mad Max</em> prequel <em>Furiosa</em> taps Anya Taylor-Joy, Chris Hemsworth, and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II</strong></li><li><strong>Charlize Theron nailed <em>Mad Max: Fury Road</em>&apos;s best scene in one take</strong></li><li><strong>Charlize Theron says <em>Mad Max</em> prequel scripts were written</strong></li></ul>
                
                        
        
        
          
              
              
              
          
        
        <p>This story originally appeared on: <strong>EW</strong> - Author:<strong>Nick Romano</strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[Nick Romano]]></dc:creator>
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