With heavy hearts, we report the sad news about this iconic and multi-talented acto

Born in Brooklyn in 1929, Jerry Adler spent decades mastering the theater before ever facing a camera. A backstage force with 50+ Broadway credits as stage manager, producer, and director—on shows like My Fair Lady—he worked with giants from Katharine Hepburn to Orson Welles. The son of a Group Theatre manager and cousin to Stella Adler, he liked to quip he was “a creature of nepotism,” even as his work spoke for itself.

Adler’s on-screen career bloomed in his 60s after an audition for The Public Eye with Joe Pesci. Television soon followed—Northern Exposure—and then the role that made him beloved to millions: Hesh Rabkin on The Sopranos. Intended as a cameo, Hesh’s dry wit and consigliere wisdom turned him into a recurring pillar of the series. He later shone as Howard Lyman on The Good Wife, with memorable turns in The West Wing, Rescue Me, Transparent, Broad City, and films including Manhattan Murder Mystery.

 

Despite TV fame, Adler never abandoned the stage, returning for Taller Than a Dwarf and Larry David’s Fish in the Dark. Even late in life he kept stretching, publishing a 2024 memoir, Too Funny for Words: Backstage Tales from Broadway, Television and the Movies, reflecting—wryly and humbly—on a career defined by reinvention.

 

Adler died peacefully in his sleep at home in New York City on August 23, 2025. He is survived by his wife of 31 years, Joan Laxman, and daughters Alisa, Amy, Laura, and Emily. From Broadway’s wings to HBO’s spotlight, his legacy is one of craft, grace, and the kind of late-blooming brilliance that inspires artists everywhere.

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