
New Zealand actor Sam Neill, best known for his role as paleontologist Dr. Alan Grant in the Jurassic Park films, has died aged 78. The news was shared on Neill’s Instagram account in a message attributed to Neill’s “whānau,” a Māori word meaning “extended family.”
“Sam was surrounded by family and passed with the dignity that has characterised his whole life,” the post reads. “The loss was sudden and unexpected but blessed by the fact that Sam remained cancer free.” Neill had been diagnosed with angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma, a type of blood cancer, in 2022.
Neill was known to the whole world as the reluctant hero of Steven Spielberg’s 1993 blockbuster about dinosaurs coming to life in the modern world. He went on to play Grant in Jurassic Park‘s two sequels and to reprise the role in 2022’s Jurassic World Dominion. The role had originally been offered to Harrison Ford (among others), and is comparable to Ford’s Indiana Jones as both an academic and a man of action. But Neill, who could somehow combine awe, fear, and flinty determination in a single look, made the part his own. His classic reaction shot on first seeing the living dinosaurs is more than just a meme; in a real sense, it is the movie, shaping and defining the audience’s reaction to Spielberg’s unprecedented spectacle.
Neill had leading-man looks and charm but a broad range that encompassed comedy, villainy, and dark psychological portraiture. In the 1980s, he had been in the running to succeed Roger Moore as James Bond, ultimately losing out to Timothy Dalton. In a 50-year career spanning major parts in both movies and TV, Jurassic Park was the biggest standout. But it was far from the only one, and the variety of both the films and the parts Neill played in them is a testament to his versatility as an actor.
In 1982, Neill played the tortured male lead in Possession, the cult European psychological horror movie by Andrzej Żuławski that has come to be recognized as a canonical classic. In 1993, he played a harsh husband to Holly Hunter in Jane Campion’s Oscar-winning romantic drama, The Piano; the following year, he swerved hard with a gutsy performance in John Carpenter’s Lovecraftian horror In the Mouth of Madness. In 1997, he fully lent into the supercharged atmosphere of Paul W.S. Anderson’s sci-fi horror Event Horizon. And in 2016, he began a phase as a beloved older character actor with a note-perfect ornery-old-coot performance in Taika Waititi’s Hunt for the Wilderpeople.
Neill lived in New Zealand, where he owned a vineyard, and was known for his self-deprecating sense of humor about his career and profession. Waititi gave Neill a perfect opportunity to express this side of himself in a cameo role as the actor who plays Anthony Hopkins’ Odin in an incompetent Asgardian theater troupe in Thor: Ragnarok and Thor: Love and Thunder.
“I’m not afraid to die, but it would annoy me,” Neill told the Guardian in 2023. “Because I’d really like another decade or two, you know? We’ve built all these lovely terraces, we’ve got these olive trees and cypresses, and I want to be around to see it all mature. And I’ve got my lovely little grandchildren. I want to see them get big. But as for the dying? I couldn’t care less.”






