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Dick Van Patten’s greatest TV success was as Tom Bradford on ABC’s Eight is Enough. He said he learned of the show’s cancellation by reading about it in the newspaper.

Dick Van Patten, the genial, round-faced comic actor who premiered on Broadway as a child, starred on television in its infancy and then, in middle age, found lasting fame as the patriarch on TV's Eight is Enough, has died.

Mr. Van Patten died Tuesday in Santa Monica, Calif., of complications from diabetes, said his publicist, Daniel Bernstein. He was 86.

The veteran entertainer began his career as a model and child actor, making his Broadway debut in 1935 at the age of seven, billed as "Dickie Van Patten." He would go on to appear in 27 other Broadway plays, acting alongside such giants as Melvyn Douglas, Tallulah Bankhead and, for three years, as the son of Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne in O Mistress Mine.

In 1949, he began a seven-year run on one of TV's earliest series, the CBS comedy Mama, playing one of the sons of a Norwegian-American family in early 1900s San Francisco.

Mr. Van Patten's greatest TV success was as Tom Bradford, a widower and father of eight who met and married Abby (played by Betty Buckley), with whom he set up a loving if chaotic household. The ABC comedy-drama aired from 1977 to 1981.

"Every day on set he was a happy, jovial person, always generous and ready to play, tease and always keep us all laughing," Ms. Buckley said. "He was the consummate professional, a wonderful actor, master of comedy and a kind and generous human being."

The well-publicized misbehaviour of some of his young co-stars, as well as declining ratings, led ABC to cancel the show. Mr. Van Patten said he learned of the cancellation by reading about it in the newspaper.

"He was truly a gem and will be missed," tweeted Willie Aames, who, now 54, played the Bradford son Tommy on the series, which launched him as a teen heartthrob. "As Dick always said: Remember our time together gang … Cause these ARE the good ole' days."

Mr. Van Patten appeared on many other shows, including Sanford and Son, The Streets of San Francisco, Adam-12, Happy Days, The Love Boat, Touched By An Angel, Arrested Development and, most recently, Hot in Cleveland.

Film projects included Spaceballs, High Anxiety, the original Freaky Friday (starring Jodie Foster), The Santa Trap and Soylent Green.

Mr. Van Patten was a serious poker player and a commentator for the World Poker Tour. It was a natural offshoot for him as an actor trading on what he called the "bluff factor – as an actor, you thrive on that, to defy the odds," he said in a 2007 interview.

An animal enthusiast, he co-founded Dick Van Patten's Natural Balance Pet Foods in 1989 as well as founding National Guide Dog Month, which began in 2008 to raise awareness and money for non-profit guide dog schools in the United States.

Richard Vincent Van Patten was born on Dec. 9, 1928, in Queens, to Richard Van Patten and the former Josephine Acerno. He grew up in Brooklyn. Every Friday night, his parents would take him to see a Broadway show, which he later said inspired his lifelong love of acting.

In a 2003 interview with The Associated Press, he explained that his love of animals was born while growing up in New York:

"If I was good each week, my father would take me to a different pet store each Saturday," he said. "I had a snake, horny toads, turtles, lizards, rabbits, guinea pigs. … I kept my alligator in the bathtub until it got too big.

"We didn't take a bath for years," he joked.

He leaves his three actor sons – Nels, Jimmy and Vincent – as well as Patricia Van Patten, his wife of 62 years (and a former June Taylor Dancer) whom he first met, and fell for, at age 14 when seated next to her in class at their professional children's school. His also leaves his sister, Joyce Van Patten, and half-brother, Timothy Van Patten, a television director.

With files from The New York Times

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