Television icon Andy Griffith has died at 86, a friend told a North Carolina news station.
Former University of North Carolina president Bill Friday told WITN News that the “The Andy Griffith Show” and ” Matlock” actor died at his home in Dare County, N.C.
The Dare County Sheriff’s office would only confirm to TheWrap that emergency services were sent toGriffith’s home Tuesday morning.
The actor’s agent did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
With his slow drawl and penchant for playing characters who wore their decency like a badge on programs like “The Andy Griffith Show,” the actor came to personify small town values with their emphasis on family and community. He was, in many ways, America‘s sheriff.
He first came to prominence on Broadway in the 1950’s in the army comedy “No Time for Sergeants” and the musical version of “Destry Rides Again.”
He would reprise his country bumpkin role in “Sergeants” for the 1958 film version, earning rave reviews and propelling the film to the top of that year’s box office winners.
But his film debut in 1957’s “A Face in the Crowd” mined a darker side of Griffith, one that he largely abandoned in favor of more mainstream slices of entertainment. Working with legendary director Elia Kazan, Griffith gave his finest dramatic performance as Larry “Lonesome” Rhodes, a drifter who is discovered by an ambitious producer and transformed into a national television phenomenon. With his folksy bromides and populist rhetoric, Rhodes seemed to presage such modern boob tube bloviators as Glenn Beck and Keith Olbermann and the film itself was a sly commentary on the power of television that was way ahead of its time.
Yet it was television that would launch Griffith into the pop culture pantheon. Playing Sheriff Andy Taylor, a widower trying to raise a young son, on the long running “The Andy Griffith Show,” the actor found the perfect vehicle for his easy-going delivery and comic talents.
Mayberry, the fictional North Carolina town where Taylor represented law and order, was populated by village eccentrics like hapless deputy Barney Fife ( Don Knotts) and naive gas station attendant Gomer Pyle ( Jim Nabors). Griffith provided the show’s center of gravity; his gift was to be a proxy for the audience and to respond to the antics around him instead of providing the spark to the lunacy.
Ron Howard, who played Griffith’s son on the program before starring in “Happy Days” and becoming an Oscar winning director, paid tribute to his television dad on Tuesday.
” Andy Griffith His pursuit of excellence and the joy he took in creating served generations & shaped my life I’m forever grateful RIP Andy,” Howard tweeted.
The show they starred in together ran for eight seasons and nearly 250 episodes before wrapping up in 1968. Although it remains his most iconic role, Griffith’s generosity as an actor may have worked against him when it came to awards — he was amazingly never nominated for an Emmy for his work as Taylor.
But popular culture had moved very far away from the bucolic Mayberry and throughout the 1970’s and early 80’s, Griffith struggled to establish another show as successful as “The Andy Griffith Show.” Among his failed efforts were “Headmaster” (1970), “The New Andy Griffith Show” (1971) and “The Yeagers” (1980).
Nearing his sixth decade, that vehicle finally came in the form of ” Matlock,” a legal drama that ran on NBC and ABC from 1986 to 1995. In it, Griffith portrayed a folksy criminal defense lawyer with a penchant for courtroom dramatics and a love of hot dogs. The accent was the same as Taylor’s, but unlike the small-town sheriff, Matlock was a brilliant attorney with a worldliness and wiliness that allowed him to translate to modern viewers.
In addition to his acting career, Griffith was a successful recording artists. He recorded several hit albums of Christian hymns for Sparrow Records and earned a Grammy Award for his work. Perhaps his most famous recording is “The Fishin’ Hole”, the jaunty theme song to “The Andy Griffith Show.”



….
RIP “Sheriff Taylor “
Watching him on TV was like having a second dad, and dreaming of the way life should be. I do now, and will always, cherish the re-runs of the Andy Griffith show. RIP big guy!
dang, first goober, now andy.. r i p sir. glad i was fortunate enough to grow up in an era of decent tv. today’s garbage is just that, garbage…
Yeah, and don’t forget Barney……we lost him a few years ago. And Aunt Bea,,
The whistle of the Fishin’ Hole theme song for his show has and always will bring good memories to mind…..one of the greatest ever…..
When he starred in Mayberry I liked him. But, when he made commercials supporting Obamacare I hated the man!
Certainly doing a commercial is reason enough to wipe out a lifetime work.
YIKES! I’m glad I don’t know you. Hate is a terrible thing to harbor. Sure, disagree, but Hate?!?!?
You’re right, “hate” is too harsh for a moderate such as myself. How about “dislike,” like in Obamacare or Romneycare?
Moderate? Where? Where?
Hateful, rightwing, TB’s.
Wrong! Moderate.
-0-0-0-
He was more than noble. But, the guy needed the money in his later years because most of his shows were bomb-outs after Mayberry. He went on to lie for O-blah-blah-ma to make a few bucks; I lost respect for the man as I did for AARP who supported Oblamacare. Justice Roberts was going to vote against it and then changed his mind for purely political reasons. The Supreme court has become very political just like everything else in this country. Look at our Congress, what have they accomplished in the past ten years….absolutely zero. I don’t care if you are a liberal or conservative…they are equally as bad. May Andy rest in peace.
Tangental off-point comments. Make themon other articles. Honor the man.
My, aren’t we fickle and overly ideological.
sad to see him go R.I.P. Andy
One of the greatest men to walk the planet…..
Unlike the garbage on tv today, his shows and fellow actors brought a message that clean and honest living was its own reward.
RIP.
Lots of great memories watching reruns of the Andy Griffith Show with my dad. Sad to hear of his passing.
Unofortunately,I didn’t weatch that many of the Mayberry shows, but one especially sticks in my memory. Barney had somehow acquired a stray goat that atre anything. Barney was practicing his harmonica (Nita, Jaunita …) when the goat ate dynamite. What to do. Finally, Andy led the goat out of town, a gunshot and an explosion are heard off stage, and Andy returns without the goat, much to the shock of Barney.
RIP, Andy.
I watched Andy, and Ron Howard reruns but was never a fan.