Randolph Mantooth, best known for playing firefighter-paramedic Johnny Gage on the hit 1970s NBC series Emergency!, has died. He was 80.
Mantooth died on Thursday, July 9, at a hospice facility in Ventura, California, his brother Donald Mantooth, confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter. Donald said the actor had been “ill for a number of years and kept getting thinner and thinner.”
The actor rose to fame in 1972 when he was cast as the quick-witted but courageous Johnny Gage opposite Kevin Tighe’s Roy DeSoto on Emergency!, the groundbreaking drama created by Jack Webb and Robert A. Cinader.
The series followed the firefighters and paramedics of Los Angeles County Fire Department’s fictional Station 51 and ran for six seasons through 1977 before returning for a series of TV movies.
Before landing the career-defining role, Mantooth admitted he had no idea what a paramedic was.
During a 2013 interview for the Television Academy Foundation’s The Interviews series, Mantooth recalled finding out his character was a paramedic, and his first reaction was,”’What the hell is a paramedic?’” He further noted, “At that time, there were only [a handful] in all of California.’”

He also revealed that he was initially hesitant to take the role because it meant cutting his hair.
Emergency! proved to be much more than a television hit. When the series started, there were only 12 paramedic units operating across North America. Within three years, 46 U.S. states had passed laws allowing paramedics to practice emergency medicine, and within a decade, more than half of Americans lived within 10 minutes of a paramedic rescue or ambulance unit. The show’s influence has long been credited with helping raise awareness of and support for modern emergency medical services.
Reflecting on the series’ legacy, Mantooth acknowledged the important influence the show had.
“When you take life-saving services out of the hospital and into the field, the number of lives that are saved is incalculable,” Mantooth said, per The Hollywood Reporter. “The stars just lined up with this show perfectly for a purpose, for a greater purpose.”
He added, “I could be remembered for driving a car that has a name like the General Lee, not that there’s anything wrong with that show. Instead I’m remembered for something that changed emergency medicine, forever. How lucky can any one person be?”
Beyond Emergency!, Mantooth enjoyed a decades-long television career, including two runs on the ABC soap Loving, where he portrayed Clay Alden and later Alex Masters. He also appeared on General Hospital, As the World Turns and One Life to Live.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.usmagazine.com ’















