Harris Yulin died at 87 in New York City, closing a life devoted to the disciplined work of acting rather than the pursuit of fame. His passing, attributed to cardiac arrest, was met with quiet respect across film, television, theater, and the classrooms where he shaped generations of performers.
Yulin’s career spanned decades and genres, defined by precision and gravity rather than spectacle. From Ghostbusters II and Scarface to Training Day, Frasier, and Ozark, he anchored scenes with a steady authority—rarely the loudest presence, often the most memorable.
Beyond the screen, his deepest impact came through teaching, most notably at Juilliard. He passed on an ethos as much as technique: acting as responsibility, rigor, and moral attention. Colleagues and students remember him as exacting, generous, and unwaveringly serious about the craft.
He is survived by his wife, actress Kristen Lowman, and by countless artists who carry his influence forward. Harris Yulin’s legacy endures not in headlines alone, but in restraint learned, standards upheld, and performances that continue to instruct long after the curtain falls.