
Jamie Foxx and Kevin Hart lead Hollywood in grieving The Cosby Show star Malcolm-Jamal Warner's shock death
According to Costa Rican authorities, Warner drowned off the coast near Cocles Beach on Sunday, July 20. His official cause of death has been confirmed as asphyxia.
Best known for his role as Theodore Huxtable, the only son of Bill Cosby 's character, Heathcliff Huxtable, Warner became a beloved household name during his time on the beloved NBC sitcom, which ran from 1984 to 1992.
His legacy as a cultural icon was cemented not only through his Emmy-nominated performance, but also through decades of work across television, music, and film.
News of his sudden death sent shockwaves through the entertainment industry, prompting a wave of tributes from colleagues, co-stars, and fellow performers who remembered him not just as a gifted actor, but as a generous spirit and trusted friend.
Jamie Foxx was among the first to honor Warner, sharing a brief but powerful message on Instagram.
'Speechless on this one rest in power, my brother,' he captioned his tribute.
Kevin Hart, clearly shaken, reacted to the news in a comment under People's Instagram post.
'WTF…. Wow. This is heartbreaking,' the comedian wrote. RIP king…. Woooow.'
Comedian and actor Eddie Griffin, who co-starred with Warner on the sitcom Malcolm & Eddie, posted a moving tribute to his Instagram Story alongside a photo of his longtime friend.
'My Big little Brother,' he wrote.
Marlee Matlin, who directed an episode of Accused in which Warner guest-starred, also paid tribute on Instagram. Sharing a photo from a 2023 panel they appeared on together, she wrote:
'I am so sad to read of the untimely passing of Malcolm Jamal Warner. He was the nicest guy and it was a privilege to have been in the same company with him, sharing a directors' panel along with @HowardmGordon and Michael Chiklis. My heart goes out to his family and friends. RIP Malcolm.'
Other stars took to social media to express their shock and grief, including Ricki Lake, Jennie Garth, Patti LaBelle and Mario Lopez, who shared broken heart emojis.
Daily Mail has reached out to Warner's representatives for comment, but they have not yet responded.
While the exact circumstances surrounding the incident remain unclear, experts note that some beaches in Costa Rica can pose serious risks depending on conditions.
Though many areas are safe for swimming, others are known for powerful currents and rip tides that demand caution.
According to WedMD, Asphyxia 'happens when your body doesn't get enough oxygen to keep you from passing.'
Breathing impairment, due to water inhalation, can cause the condition, which can result in unconsciousness or death.
Although it is unknown what caused him to drown, the waters in Costa Rica can be dangerous, depending on the specific beach and conditions.
Other stars took to social media to express their shock and grief, including Ricki Lake, Jennie Garth, Patti LaBelle and Mario Lopez, who shared broken heart emojis
While many beaches offer safe swimming, some have strong currents and rip tides that require caution.
The actor, best known for his role as Theodore Huxtable on the beloved NBC sitcom, appeared in all eight seasons from 1984 to 1992.
At the time, Warner was just a teenager, but his performance earned widespread acclaim, including a nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series at the 1986 Primetime Emmy Awards.
Warner is survived by his wife and young daughter, born in 2017.
While he occasionally shared glimpses of his family life on social media, he chose to keep their identities private, opting not to publicly reveal their names.
His character, Theo, was based on Bill Cosby's real-life son, Ennis Cosby, and was portrayed with depth and sensitivity.
In the show, Theo is diagnosed with dyslexia after struggling academically during his freshman year at New York University—an arc that resonated with many viewers; seen in 1990
In the show, Theo is diagnosed with dyslexia after struggling academically during his freshman year at New York University—an arc that resonated with many viewers.
Beyond The Cosby Show, Warner carved out a successful and diverse career in both comedy and drama.
He starred as Malcolm McGee in the UPN sitcom Malcolm & Eddie (1996–2000) opposite Eddie Griffin, and later headlined BET's Reed Between the Lines from 2011 to 2015 as Dr. Alex Reed.
His television credits also included recurring roles and guest appearances on shows like Sons of Anarchy, Jeremiah, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, and Community. Warner also voiced the Producer character on the educational children's series The Magic School Bus.
Prior to his breakout role, Warner, who was born in New Jersey, he attended a performing arts school in New York City.
Cosby personally selected Warner to play his son.
In 2023, Warner insisted he and the rest of the cast of The Cosby Show 'still very proud of' their hit series.
'We share a unique experience that keeps us lovingly bonded no matter how much time goes between seeing or hearing from each other,' he told People.
'Regardless of how some people may feel about the show now, I'm still proud of the legacy and having been a part of such an iconic show that had such a profound impact on — first and foremost, Black culture — but also American culture,' Warner explained, nodding to the rape, sexual assault and sexual harassment claims against his former onscreen dad.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
18 minutes ago
- BBC News
'Her acid tongue is usually in her cheek': How Gwyneth Paltrow became a divisive, defiant icon
Her larger-than-life sensibility and scale of ambition have led to both admiration and criticism – and she seems to thrive in her own divisiveness. The author of new book Gwyneth: The Biography, tells the BBC what fascinates her about the star. Gwyneth Paltrow is hardly an enigma. From crystal "healing" eggs to vagina-themed candles, we might feel that we know the actress and businesswoman intimately. And yet, we really only know her through headlines – most recently, she starred in US tech firm Astronomer's "clever PR move". For more than 30 years, through stories about her boyfriends, her "conscious uncoupling" from Chris Martin, crying at the Oscars, narrowly escaping Harvey Weinstein's advances, and in the very public 2023 ski-crash trial, the public has come to both love and loathe her. Now a new book, Gwyneth: The Biography, explores Paltrow's life and divisive public persona. The woman who admits she "can't possibly pretend to be someone who makes $25,000 a year", and laments that an accident on the slopes she was (wrongly) blamed for caused her to lose a day of skiing, seems to thrive in her own divisiveness. Her acid tongue is usually in her cheek, we have to imagine, when she says these things. It's as if she's winking and nudging in an "if you know, you know" fashion. "Gwyneth has, to her extraordinary credit, found a way to be even more annoying," the Guardian wrote upon the launch of Goop in 2008. Paltrow's wellness empire catapulted her into a whole new stratosphere of celebrity. And experts in health have been scathing about some of the claims made by Goop and Paltrow. In January 2020, NHS chief Simon Stevens claimed that the Goop brand championed the views of "quacks, charlatans and cranks". His comments followed the Netflix airing of The Goop Lab, a behind-the-scenes view of Paltrow's business. In an interview Paltrow brushed off criticism with a blithe side swipe at naysayers. "I will never understand the level of fascination and projection. But we don't want to not change the conversation just to please everybody," she said, following up with the assertion that despite a lack of scientific basis for Goop products, unqualified health measures had been around for "thousands of years". And yet, Paltrow is fully aware of her saleability. Last week, following the drama in which a couple at a Coldplay concert – later revealed to be colleagues from AI company Astronomer – dived to get out of view of the camera, Paltrow was recruited to front a PR campaign for the organisation. SmartCompany labelled it "an iconic PR turnaround". In her clever, deadpan style (which she demonstrated in the ski court trial), Paltrow nails the butter-wouldn't-melt persona the ad calls for. Larger than life In the new book by journalist and author Amy Odell, Paltrow is described as "one of the most resented celebrities in the world". While Gwyneth herself didn't participate in the book, Odell interviewed more than 220 friends, colleagues and industry insiders to create a narrative of how this waifish blonde actress morphed from Brad Pitt's girlfriend to a single, unmistakable name. It follows Odell's last book, Anna: The Biography, which was published in 2022, about Vogue fashion doyenne Anna Wintour. There are parallels between the two women's lives and personas that are undeniable, both are ambitious, larger-than-life figures, and it's easy to see why Odell was transfixed by them. The scale of ambition displayed by both of these women is something that interested the author. "I think ambition is a great thing, and that's a trait I admire greatly in both of them," Odell tells the BBC. "Women's ambition is not always viewed positively, and I wondered if that's why Gwyneth downplayed her ambition early in her career," says Odell. "I also am interested in people who have had cultural impact, and ambition probably helps explain why both were able to accomplish things that truly did impact culture." And there's no denying the scale of Paltrow's goals, says the author. "With Gwyneth, we see her ambition in the breadth of Goop – she wanted Goop to do everything, and to execute it all perfectly. That's how Goop ended up as a newsletter, a publishing imprint, a live events business, a beauty line, a fashion line, and more." Paltrow may have been portrayed as an ice queen, however, her friends refute this. On an episode of Behind the Velvet Rope with David Yontef, Paltrow's friend Shaman Durek claimed the ice queen label was "all lies". He said, "She will give you the shirt off her back. She doesn't get angry. It takes her a lot to get angry. And even when she gets angry, she feels sad about being angry because she doesn't want to be angry." He added, "Gwyneth is the most loving person." She has also been underestimated. For all her acting talent, Paltrow's love life – and the famous men she has often been attached to – has inspired sensationalist tabloid speculation. Even leading up to the publication of this biography, tabloid magazines were hungrily republishing excerpts purely focused on former partners Brad Pitt, Ben Affleck and Chris Martin. Like father, like daughter? Some describe Paltrow as a "nepo baby". Her father, Bruce Paltrow, was an established producer (Hill Street Blues) and her mother Blythe Danner was, and is, a noted actress (in 2000's Meet the Parents, among many other films). She was attending theatres with her mother from infancy, but she worked for her gigs: auditioning, rehearsing and spending hours on set, determined to get the take. When she won an Oscar for Shakespeare in Love in 1999 at the age of 26, her teary acceptance speech made her the butt of relentless jokes. In the same year, The Guardian labelled her "Worst Actress" in its list of "Worst Winner's Speech Awards". In 2023, Paltrow told Variety that the "British press was so horrible to me". One of the focal points of Odell's book is the close father-daughter relationship between Bruce and Gwyneth. It was Paltrow's father, the book suggests, who engendered the sense of heightened privilege and lofty expectations his daughter became accustomed to from childhood. When working on films, Bruce would fly first class with Gwyneth and her brother, Jake, even when, it is claimed, their mother Blythe was flying economy. Odell's book recounts the time Gwyneth boarded a plane with her mother and said, "You mean instead of flying first class, we're flying no class?" "It's impossible to understand someone, as a biographer, if you don't take the time to research where a subject came from, and how their parents impacted them," Odell tells the BBC. "I always make a big effort to interview people who knew a subject's parents, and was fortunate to gain great insight into Gwyneth through those interviews. Gwyneth is a fascinating mix of both of her parents – she has her mother's extraordinary acting talent and her dad's polarising personality and excellent aesthetic taste." More like this:• 10 of the best summer reads• The radical erotic novel that has divided readers• Intimate images from 'the real Hotel California' When her father died of cancer in 2002 at the age of 58, she was inconsolable. Losing your father is a seismic event, says Odell. "Gwyneth lost Bruce when she was 30 years old. I lost my dad suddenly, too, when I was 27," she tells the BBC. "It was a huge, inexplicable tragedy for which I desperately wanted answers where there were none. Gwyneth went looking for answers after her dad was diagnosed with throat cancer – so I can understand the instinct to do that in a very personal way. I think Gwyneth found answers in wellness, and later started sharing her findings with the public through Goop, whether they were rooted in science or not." So, while attention on Paltrow has often centred on her famous partners, or her success attributed to her father's industry networking, to have built Goop into a multimillion-dollar lifestyle empire is to her credit. And despite the accusations of quackery, the fact that she has been derided for it perhaps tells us more about society's attitude to successful women than anything else. Readers will likely flock to Gwyneth: The Biography in search of gossip and insights into the charmed life of celebrities. What they'll get, in addition, is a reminder that ice queen Gwyneth is just as complicated and curious as we are. Soon after turning 50, Gwyneth said, "As a woman, you turn 50, and maybe we all give ourselves permission to be exactly who we are. And we stop trying to be what other people are expecting us to be, and you kind of exhale into this other thing." Ultimately, love her or hate her, Gwyneth is always going to exist in another sphere to 99.9% of us – and whatever we expect her to be, she will probably confound those expectations. Gwyneth: The Biography is published by Simon & Schuster -- For more Culture stories from the BBC, follow us on Facebook and Instagram.


The Sun
an hour ago
- The Sun
Nepo baby looks identical to her movie icon dad as she walks the red carpet – can you guess who?
A NEPO-BABY with a Hollywood star dad left fans doing a double take as she posed on the Red Carpet. The California-born actress, model and musician, 25, looked hugely similar to her Pulp Fiction actor papa as she stepped out in a stylish leather outfit. 7 7 7 7 Nepo baby Ella Travolta, the sole daughter of Grease frontman John, posed in a chocolate dress complete with hoop earrings at the Tod's Luncheon in Beverly Hills. She swept her brunette hair into relaxed waves, showcasing her natural beauty and blue eyes similar to her famous father. Ella, whose mother is the late Kelly Preston, flashed a smile to the camera as she proved a pro with her poses. She has followed in her parents' footsteps, with roles in movies Old Dogs, Eye For An Eye, Get Lost and Extra. Yet she has also branched out and forged a career in the modelling and music industries. Colors of Love singer Ella posted a link to her new track to her Instagram page, where one fan gushed her vocals were "sweet, pure and like an angel." FAMILY AFFAIR Meanwhile, Scientologist Ella often posts videos and pictures of her father, 71, on social media. The model is extremely close with her dad and younger brother Ben, 14, after a series of heartbreaking loses. When she was just nine years old, her older brother, Jett, passed away after suffering a seizure. Then, in 2020, she endured another heartbreaking loss when her mother, actress Kelly Preston, died of breast cancer. In February, Ella posted a tribute to John as he turned 71. She uploaded a throwback snap showing her as a child sharing time with him and the words: "Happy birthday to the kindest, most loving, special person I know. I love you so much." Ella previously opened up on living with her famous father and told Hello! Magazine: "I recently binge watched all of his movies just again as well. "Which was really cool and really fun to just watch everything in a new period of time." MODEL DAUGHTER John Travolta's daughter, Ella Bleu, has just signed with Storm Models in London, the same agency that famously discovered Kate back in 1988 at the tender age of 14. Ella's new agent, Paula Karaiskos, confirmed the exciting news, expressing her enthusiasm about representing the 24-year-old in the UK. Announcing the signing on social media, Paula wrote, "She has an advertising campaign launching this spring, as well as a new film this summer. Watch this space!" Ella's career has been on the rise, and her father couldn't be prouder. Sharing a photo of her attending New York Fashion Week, John wrote, "So proud of Ella's debut at fashion week in New York City." Speaking about her journey into fashion, Ella explained, "I like it because it is very creative. When I was a child, like many others, I liked to wear makeup, dress up in different clothes... When I grew up, I stopped paying attention to it." In an interview with Spanish magazine Mujerhoy, she added, "But then I became interested in it again in a different way, more out of admiration for creativity." 7 7 7


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Batman and Rambo star Alon Aboutboul dies aged 60 after collapsing on beach
Actor Alon Aboutboul has died at the age of 60 after collapsing on an a beach in Israel. The star had been swimming in waters off the HaBonim beach strip in northern Israel before returning to shore and collapsing in front of horrified tourists. It's understood that Aboutboul, whose film credits included Rambo III and Batman epic The Dark Knight Rises, initially complained of feeling unwell after returning to the beach. A popular tourist destination because of its proximity to the Mediterranean, the HaBonim beach strip is considered to be one of the most rugged coastal areas in Israel. Paramedics attempted to resuscitate the actor at the scene after a call was placed at 8.22am, but they were unable to save his life. Aboutboul is survived by his partner Shir Bilya, an Israeli writer and director, and their four children. Born in 1964 to a Sephardic Jewish family in Kiryat Ata, Aboutboul began his acting career as a teenager after graduating from Thelma Yellin High School of Arts in 1983. His first Hollywood break came just five years later, with the actor taking a small role as Nissem in Peter MacDonald's 1988 blockbuster Rambo III, starring alongside Sylvester Stallone. Further screen roles included that of a soldier in Steven Spielberg's critically acclaimed drama Munich, a 2005 rendering of Mossad's response to the 1972 Olympics massacre. He also featured alongside Joshua Jackson in cult science fiction show Fringe, before landing a pivotal role in Christopher Nolan's final Batman offering. Starring alongside Christian Bale and Tom Hardy, Aboutboul played Dr Leonid Pavel - the Russian nuclear physicist kidnapped by Batman nemesis Bane in 2012 blockbuster The Dark Knight Rises. After hijacking the CIA plane upon which Pavel is travelling in the film's opening scene, Bane - memorably played by Hardy - is heard telling his terrified captive: 'Calm down, doctor. Now is not the time for fear. That comes later.' In 2016 he played Pakistani arms trafficker Aamir Barkawi in London Has Fallen, a Babak Najafi directed political action thriller starring Gerard Butler and Morgan Freeman. Recent TV credits include dramas Homeland, Body of Lies, Legends, NCIS Los Angeles, and SVU. Until 2022 he worked alongside Damson Idris in Showtime crime-drama Snowfall, playing Avi Drexler - an Israeli drug-lord with links to Mossad. He left the show after featuring in 25 episodes, across five seasons. During a 42-year career - much of it spent working in Israeli film and television - Aboutboul also won numerous accolades, among them the Ophir Award and an Israeli Television Academy Award. Leading the tributes to Aboutboul on social media platform X, Israeli Culture and Sport Minister Miki Zohar said it was 'deeply painful' to hear of his passing. He wrote: 'Last night I watched an interview with him, where he talked about filming a movie he recently participated in, and the passion for the profession that radiated from him was evident even after so many years in the field. 'Alon was an Ophir Award and Television Academy Award winner and over the years portrayed a wide range of characters to which he brought depth and emotion, leaving a deep mark on Israeli culture. May his memory be blessed.'