Actor Ernest Borgnine, whose career spanned more than 60 years, has died aged 95, his spokesman Harry Flynn has said.
The Oscar-winning actor died of renal failure in a Los Angeles hospital with his family by his side Harry Flynn told the Associated Press.
Ernest Borgnine continued acting until recently with a role in the hospital drama ER in 2009.
He won an Oscar in 1955 for his role in the film Marty.
HIs family released a statement saying Ernest Borgnine “had been in excellent health until a recent illness”.
Ernest Borgnine was also known for his roles in western The Wild Bunch and disaster movie The Poseidon Adventure.
His TV series McHale’s Navy was also a major success in the United States. He is also remembered for his role as the jovial Dominic Santini in the 1980s series Airwolf.
The son of Italian immigrants, he was born Ermes Effron Borgnino on 24 January 1917 in Hamden, Connecticut. His parents later changed the family name to Borgnine.
He initially never considered a career in acting, serving in the US Navy after leaving high school in 1935.
It was only on the prompting of his mother than he enrolled in a drama school after the end of World War II.
After making his acting breakthrough in a Tennessee Williams’ stageplay, The Glass Menagerie, Ernest Borgnine gained his first major film role in From Here to Eternity in 1953, playing a sadistic sergeant who beats up Frank Sinatra’s character, Private Angelo Maggio.
His trademark stocky build, gruff voice and leering grin led him to be frequently cast as the villain.
But he escaped the stereotype in 1955, landing an Oscar-winning lead role as a romantic New York butcher in the low-budget film Marty.
He went on to play character-acting roles in more than 60 films, including The Vikings (1958), The Flight of the Phoenix (1965), The Dirty Dozen (1967), Sam Peckinpah’s The Wild Bunch (1969) and The Poseidon Adventure (1972).
Ernest Borgnine’s work in later life included playing the voice of Mermaid Man on children’s TV series SpongeBob SquarePants, as well as that of Carface on the animated film All Dogs Go to Heaven 2.
His personal life was turbulent at times, and included four failed marriages. One, to singer Ethel Merman, lasted barely a month.
“The Oscar made me a star, and I’m grateful,” Ernest Borgnine said in 1966.
“But I feel had I not won the Oscar, I wouldn’t have gotten into the messes I did in my personal life.”
However, his fifth marriage, to Norwegian-born businesswoman Tova Traesnaes in 1972, endured. He is survived by three children from two earlier marriages.