SAN RAFAEL Calif./LOS ANGELES
(Reuters) - Oscar-winning actor and groundbreaking comedian Robin
Williams hanged himself with a belt in his Northern California home
after he had sought treatment for depression, a coroner said on Tuesday
based on preliminary findings.
Williams, 63, was found dead by his personal assistant at midday on
Monday in a bedroom. He was suspended from a belt wedged between a
closet door and a door frame, in a seated position just off the ground,
Marin County's assistant chief deputy coroner, Keith Boyd, told a news
conference.
"Mr. Williams'
personal assistant became concerned at approximately 11:45 a.m. when he
failed to respond to knocks on his bedroom door," said Boyd.
"His right shoulder area was touching the door with his body
perpendicular to the door and slightly suspended. Mr. Williams at that
time was cool to the touch with rigor mortis present in his body," Boyd
added.
The official
preliminary cause of death was asphyxia due to hanging, he said, and
conclusion of the investigation is still weeks away.
Officials also found a pocket
knife near Williams and superficial cuts on his left wrist with dried
red material that matched what was on the knife blade. It was not yet
known if it was his blood.
Williams had been open about his struggles with alcohol and cocaine and
in the past months had entered a rehabilitation center to help him
maintain sobriety. But many questions remained over what could have led
him to take his own life.
Williams' publicist, Mara Buxbaum, said on Monday that he had been
suffering from severe depression, and Boyd acknowledged that he had been
seeking treatment without giving more details.
His tragic end stood in stark contrast to the many on-screen characters
he portrayed who encouraged those around them to tap into their own
inner vitality, a wellspring of creativity to which he himself gave full
vent in films such as "Good Morning, Vietnam" and "Dead Poets Society."
Williams was last seen alive by his wife, Susan Schneider, on Sunday
night when she retired for the evening. She left the next morning around
10 a.m., thinking that her husband was still asleep.
Boyd would not say whether
Williams had left a suicide note, nor if any drugs or alcohol were
involved. The full toxicology report would take two to six weeks, he
said.
In addition to his
wife, Williams is survived by three grown children - daughter Zelda, and
sons Cody and Zachary. Funeral arrangements are pending and his body
has been released by the coroner facility in neighboring Napa County.
'THANKS CHIEF'
Tributes poured out from actors, comedians, politicians and generations
of fans, including President Barack Obama who called him a
"one-of-a-kind" actor.
A
force of manic energy, Williams long ago established himself as one of
the world's most beloved comedians, and took audiences on wild flights
of imagination that often stressed one simple message: seize the day.
His improvisational stand-up
routine broke all rules, whether he was giving a comedic account of a
nuclear accident in the style of Shakespeare or grabbing a camera from
an audience member and pointing the lens down his pants.
Ben Affleck, whose breakthrough role came alongside Williams and Matt
Damon in 1997's "Good Will Hunting," for which Williams won his only
Oscar, said he was heartbroken.
"Thanks chief - for your friendship and for what you gave the world,"
Affleck wrote on his Facebook page. "Robin had a ton of love in him. He
personally did so much for so many people. He made Matt and my dreams
come true. What do you owe a guy who does that? Everything."
Spontaneous acts of tribute sprang up at landmarks from his career.
In Boston, scores of people jotted tributes in chalk to Williams near
at bench in the lush Public Garden downtown, which featured in "Good
Will Hunting".
Mourners hung
signs including "You will be missed" and "RIP Robin" on the wooden
fence of the home in Boulder, Colorado, where parts of the intro credits
for his breakout 1970s TV comedy, "Mork & Mindy," were filmed.
On the Hollywood Walk of Fame, fans congregated around Williams' star, leaving flowers and candles to honor the actor.
"My kids grew up on 'Mrs Doubtfire'," said Erlinda Fantauzzi, referring
to the hit movie in which he played a father who took on the persona of
a tender British nanny to be close to his kids. "I feel so bad. He was a
tortured soul and he died alone. He touched adults and children," she
said.
Interest in his film
work spiked on Tuesday, with "Dead Poets Society," "Mrs. Doubtfire," and
"Good Morning, Vietnam" making it into the top 20 in the iTunes movie
chart.
(Additional
reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy and Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles, Scott
Malone in Boston and Daniel Wallis in Denver; Writing by Mary Milliken;
Editing by Sandra Maler)

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