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'Hagrid' actor Robbie Coltrane dies at 72

Actor Robbie Coltrane attends a media preview of The Wizarding World of Harry Potter-Diagon Alley at the Universal Orlando Resort in Florida inn June 2014. (Reuters File Photo)

LONDON: Robbie Coltrane, the larger-than-life Scottish actor who played the beloved half-giant Hagrid in the Harry Potter films, has died at the age of 72, his agent said.

Coltrane’s more than four-decade career ranged from roles in the James Bond films GoldenEye and The World Is Not Enough to the lead in the 1990s British TV series Cracker, as the criminal psychologist Dr Edward “Fitz” Fitzgerald.

Harry Potter author JK Rowling led the tributes on Twitter, writing: “I’ll never know anyone remotely like Robbie again.

“He was an incredible talent, a complete one-off, and I was beyond fortunate to know him, work with him and laugh my head off with him. I send my love and deepest condolences to his family, above all his children.”

In a statement, Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe, 33, called Coltrane “one of the funniest people I’ve met.”

“I’ve especially fond memories of him keeping our spirits up on Prisoner of Azkaban, when we were all hiding from the torrential rain for hours in Hagrid’s hut and he was telling stories and cracking jokes to keep morale up,” he said of the film released in 2004.

Rubeus Hagrid is the Keeper of Keys and Grounds of Hogwarts, the primary setting for the first Potter novels.

Coltrane’s agent Belinda Wright called Coltrane a “unique talent” and said he had brought joy to children across the world playing the boy wizard’s monster-loving friend.

“As well as being a wonderful actor, he was forensically intelligent…, brilliantly witty…, and after 40 years of being proud to be called his agent, I shall miss him,” she said in a statement.

Born March 30, 1950, in Rutherglen, South Lanarkshire, Anthony Robert McMillan changed his professional name as a homage to the celebrated jazz musician John Coltrane.

He was a gifted comic actor and a star of Britain’s 1980s alternative comedy boom, playing a string of television roles that included regular appearances in The Comic Strip Presents … anthology series.

In 1987, he rose to greater prominence starring alongside Emma Thompson in John Byrne’s mini-series Tutti Frutti as the doomed lead singer Big Jazza McGlone in a tale of fictional Scots rock ’n’ roll band The Majestics.

With the crime series Cracker in the 1990s, he showed he could also play serious parts. Nicola Sturgeon, Scotland’s First Minister, said it was her favourite of his roles.

“Robbie Coltrane, Scottish entertainment legend — you will be hugely missed,” she wrote.

The British actor and broadcaster Stephen Fry — a fellow breakout star of the alternative comedy boom — wrote that he had met Coltrane almost exactly 40 years ago.

“I was awe/terror/love struck all at the same time. Such depth, power & talent: funny enough to cause helpless hiccups & honking as we made our first TV show, Alfresco. Farewell, old fellow. You’ll be so dreadfully missed”.

Coltrane died on Friday in hospital near Falkirk in Scotland, Britain’s PA Media reported

No cause of death was given but Wright thanked medical staff at Forth Valley Royal Hospital in Larbert, central Scotland, “for their care and diplomacy”.

He is survived by his sister Annie Rae, his children Spencer and Alice, and their mother Rhona Gemmell, Wright said.

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