James Ransone Dies at 46

James Ransone’s life was marked by the same raw honesty he brought to every role. Onscreen, he made flawed men unforgettable; offscreen, he refused to hide his own scars. From Baltimore streets to HBO soundstages, he carried a bruised tenderness that made Ziggy Sobotka, the haunted Marine in Generation Kill, and the grown-up Eddie in It Chapter Two feel painfully real. Colleagues remember a man who could light up a set with a joke, then walk into a scene and break your heart in a single look.

His openness about childhood abuse and addiction turned private suffering into a lifeline for others, showing that survival could coexist with vulnerability. Now, tributes pour in for the husband, father, and friend behind the characters. Though his story ended too soon, the emotional truth he left on film and television will keep speaking for him, long after the cameras have stopped.

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