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“Pulp Fiction” Actor Peter Greene’s Cause of Death Revealed 2 Months After Being Found Dead in N.Y.C. Apartment

NEED TO KNOW

  • Actor Peter Greene’s cause of death has been revealed, two months after he was found dead in his New York City apartment Dec. 12

  • The star was known for movies like Pulp Fiction

  • “Nobody played a bad guy better than Peter,” his manager Gregg Edwards said in an interview after his death

Peter Greene’s cause of death has been revealed, two months after he was found dead in his New York City apartment on Friday, Dec. 12.

New York’s Chief Medical Examiner office said Wednesday, Feb. 18, that Greene, who was 60, died of a “gunshot wound of left axilla with injury of brachial artery.” The manner of death was deemed an “accident.”

Greene’s death was first reported by the New York Daily News. His manager Gregg Edwards confirmed he was found dead in his apartment in a statement obtained by PEOPLE Dec. 13.

Edwards told NBC News that a wellness check was conducted at Greene’s home after music was heard playing in his apartment for over 24 hours. He had spoken with the actor earlier in the week.

“Nobody played a bad guy better than Peter,” Edwards told the outlet. “But he also had, you know, a gentle side that most people never saw, and a heart as big as gold.”

Peter Greene in “The Mask”

Netflix

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Greene’s first screen role was in 1990 in an episode of the NBC crime drama series Hardball. His film debut came two years later in the movie Laws of Gravity, starring alongside Edie Falco.

The New Jersey-born actor starred in several breakout roles in the early 1990s, including the films Clean Shaven (1993), The Mask (1994) as the antagonist, Dorian Tyrell, starring opposite Jim Carrey and Cameron Diaz, as well as Quentin Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction (1994), in which he notably played the antagonist Zed.

Greene also made memorable appearances in the movies Kiss & Tell (1997), The Usual Suspects (1995), Blue Streak (1999), and Training Day (2001), the latter of which saw him act opposite Denzel Washington and Ethan Hawke.

“He was one of the best character actors on the planet,” Edwards told Deadline. “He was a good friend who would give you the shirt off his back. He was loved and will be missed.”

“Peter’s latest project was driven by his passion for raising awareness about the global deaths resulting from the administration’s dismantling of USAID,” Edwards said in a statement obtained by PEOPLE. “He was co-producing and served as one of the narrators for the documentary From the American People: The Withdrawal of USAID, alongside Jason Alexander and Kathleen Turner.”

Sharing a GoFundMe related to the project, he added, “The best way to honor him would be to help him spread the word about what is happening.”

Read the original article on People

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