John Gavin Photo: IC
Actor John Gavin, whose handsome looks landed him roles in the 1960 films
Psycho and
Spartacus and was later US ambassador to Mexico, died in California, US media reported. He was 86.
Gavin died at his home in Beverly Hills, the Los Angeles Times reported, citing Brad Burton Moss, manager of Gavin's actress wife Constance Towers. He gave no cause.
With his square jaw, dark good looks and 6-foot-4 (1.93 meter) frame, Gavin was twice nearly cast as James Bond.
Gossip columnist Hedda Hopper described him as handsome with "a silken sort of threat which gives women chills up and down the spine."
Gavin gained widespread attention as the lead of the 1958 World War II movie
A Time to Love and a Time to Die, based on an Erich Maria Remarque novel.
He then played opposite Lana Turner in
Imitation of Life (1959), as Janet Leigh's divorced lover in Alfred Hitchcock's
Psycho, and as Julius Caesar in
Spartacus.
Gavin was signed to play James Bond in
Diamonds are Forever (1971) and
Live and Let Die (1973), losing out to Sean Connery and Roger Moore.
Gavin had Hollywood friends and in 1971 was elected president of the Screen Actors Guild.
When Ronald Reagan became US president in 1981, he chose Gavin - fluent in Spanish, and of Mexican, Spanish and Chilean ancestry - as US ambassador to Mexico. The Mexicans chafed at an actor in such an important post.
Gavin's criticism of Mexican government corruption, as well as complaints about illegal drugs and undocumented immigrants, did not help. The nadir was reached when Gavin made some indelicate comments after a deadly 1985 Mexico City earthquake. He resigned as ambassador the following year.
Gavin later had a successful career in business, including as president of Univisa Satellite Communications.