As Noonan later revealed, he landed the part after channelling his anger at seeing his audition repeatedly delayed: “[Mann] said, ‘You’re really scary. How do you do that?’ I said, ‘Michael, the secret to being scary is to be really scared. Because when you’re really scared, people are really scared of you.’ I was really poor and desperate, and this [was] a real part. I proceeded then to turn it down about five times. I said, ‘I’m not doing it for under $100,000.’ My agent said, ‘You’re crazy.’ Somehow, they ended up giving me that amount of money.”
Though Mann kept Noonan away from his co-stars to heighten tensions, the actor proved a wily foe. “I found out later that Noonan was acting in a very spooky way,” Mann recalled, “[He was] kind of creeping around and spying on some actors almost as if he was stalking them.” Noonan’s performance was a lesson in the sly craft of the character actor: appearing around Manhunter’s halfway point, Dollarhyde promptly grabs film, lead William Petersen and indeed the viewer by the throat.
The impression was so forceful that Noonan immediately fell subject to typecasting: Frankenstein’s monster in the teen horror The Monster Squad (1987), the villain in RoboCop 2 (1989). More inventively, he was also cast as Tom Noonan, the actor portraying serial killer The Ripper in the postmodern Arnie blockbuster Last Action Hero (1993), though Noonan confessed to some bemusement as to his newly illustrious circumstances: “It was not easy for me to fake being a movie star.”
That sizeable payday, however, allowed Noonan to finance and direct What Happened Was… (1994), based on his own play. Shot in eleven days for $300,000, this disarming two-hander followed co-workers (played by Noonan and Karen Sillas) navigating an awkward first date. After winning Sundance’s Grand Jury Prize, the film fell victim to spotty distribution, but its admirers included a young Charlie Kaufman, who declared himself profoundly influenced by a film Noonan described as “what’s happening in the dark inside your heart”.
Thomas Patrick Noonan was born in Greenwich, Connecticut on April 12, 1951, one of four children to dentist John Noonan and his maths teacher wife Rita (née McGannon). At St. Mary’s High School, his height made him a natural basketball star: “A lot of the skills that you would need for acting come through that... [It’s] a life-and-death struggle in front of people that you hope to impress.”
He won raves as the oldest son Tilden in the original 1978 production of Sam Shepard’s Pulitzer-winning Buried Child, then caught the New Hollywood’s coattails. After debuting on screen in Paul Mazursky’s Willie & Phil (1980), he befriended John Cassavetes while making Gloria (1980), but clashed with Michael Cimino during Heaven’s Gate (1980): “He pointed a blank gun at my face… He was really crazy.”
In 1983, Noonan founded the Paradise Factory theatre in Manhattan, funding it via roles in such studio filler as the Dudley Moore vehicle Best Defence (1984). But he was getting somewhere: prior to Manhunter, he’d auditioned for the Dennis Hopper role in Blue Velvet (1986). Post-Manhunter, he worked constantly, notably shaking De Niro down for better pay as the hacker Kelso in Mann’s Heat (1995); in “Paper Hearts”, a 1996 episode of The X-Files, Noonan played John Lee Roche, a killer teasing information about Agent Mulder’s missing sister.
Long-time fan Kaufman cast Noonan as Philip Seymour Hoffman’s onscreen double in Synecdoche, New York (2008) and the voice of every supporting character in the stopmotion Anomalisa (2015). Noonan’s final directorial credit, The Shape of Something Squashed (2014), was inspired by his experience standing in for Donald Sutherland during rehearsals for a Hunger Games sequel; his last appearances were on TV, lending his voice to HBO’s adult animation Animals. (2018) and playing the Pallid Man in the rebooted 12 Monkeys (2015-18).
In 2021, Noonan revealed he’d pitched a What Happened Was… sequel to Netflix, reuniting the central couple thirty years on. Though the project was never realised, he held firm to an idea that art should offer something more than mere escapism: “I don’t think you go to a play to forget or to a movie to be distracted. I think life generally is a distraction and that going to a movie is a way to get back, not go away.”
He married twice, to the actresses Karen Young and Talia Lugacy; both ended in divorce. He is survived by Felix and Wanda, his two children by Young.
Tom Noonan, born April 12, 1951, died February 14, 2026.

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