Peter Greene was found alone in his New York apartment, and Hollywood is in shock.
The man who terrified millions on screen is suddenly, devastatingly gone. No foul play.
No final performance. Just silence where a voice once roared.
Peter Greene’s death at 60 closes the curtain on one of cinema’s most unforgettable character actors.
From The Mask’s ruthless Dorian Tyrell to Pulp Fiction’s chilling Zed, he built a career out of menace, elevating every scene with a stare that felt like a threat and a wound at once.
Offscreen, he was remembered very differently: a generous friend, a collaborator obsessed with getting it right, a man who fought hard to overcome the chaos of his youth.
Discovered unresponsive in his Lower East Side home, Greene leaves behind nearly a hundred screen credits and an independent thriller that will now never be made.
His journey from a runaway teen on New York’s streets to working with Hollywood’s biggest names was scarred by addiction, relapse, and recovery, but also defined by resilience.
In the end, the villain audiences loved to fear was, to those closest to him, a survivor who finally ran out of time.