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He was just three years old when doctors told his parents the tumor had to come out immediately

Posted on November 27, 2025 By Aga Co No Comments on He was just three years old when doctors told his parents the tumor had to come out immediately

Peter Falk created one of television’s most unforgettable characters — the rumpled, sharp-eyed detective who wandered into crime scenes with a cheap cigar, a battered raincoat, and a mind far sharper than anyone expected. “Just one more thing…” became a cultural catchphrase, a line that still echoes across generations of TV fans. For decades, Columbo was the unassuming hero who outsmarted polished criminals simply by noticing what others ignored — the tiny inconsistency, the odd detail, the clue that didn’t fit.

The show dominated prime-time in the 1970s and returned periodically for years after, running all the way until 2003. Columbo flipped the detective genre on its head. Instead of a glamorous, high-tech investigator, Falk introduced audiences to a scruffy, blue-collar cop who seemed ordinary — until the moment he revealed he wasn’t. It was a brilliant performance, earning him four Emmy Awards and a permanent place in pop-culture history.

But Peter Falk’s real story was far more complicated, marked by triumphs, flaws, and deep struggles.

Long before Hollywood, Falk endured more than most. At age three, he lost his right eye to retinoblastoma, a rare cancer, and wore a prosthetic eye for the rest of his life. The artificial eye contributed to his iconic squint — one of Columbo’s most defining traits — but it never slowed him down. As a child, he played sports like any other kid and kept a sharp sense of humor about his condition. In one interview, he recalled being called out at third base during a high-school game. Angry, he popped out his glass eye, handed it to the umpire, and said, “Try this.” The crowd erupted.

His Hollywood breakthrough came in 1960 with Murder, Inc., where his chilling portrayal of hitman Abe Reles earned him an Oscar nomination. The following year he received another nomination for Pocketful of Miracles, acting alongside Bette Davis. By the early 1970s, Falk was one of television’s highest-paid actors, earning around $250,000 per episode of Columbo — an extraordinary figure for the time.

But success brought turbulence. In Beyond Columbo, authors Richard Lertzman and William Birnes describe a far messier private life: heavy drinking, constant smoking, womanizing, emotional distance, and a troubled family dynamic. Falk’s real personality didn’t always resemble the gentle detective he played. Those close to him said he could be warm and captivating, then withdrawn and unreachable — a man who loved deeply but struggled to stay grounded.

His first marriage, to his college sweetheart Alyce Mayo, lasted 16 years. They met at Syracuse University and dated for more than a decade before marrying in 1960. They adopted two daughters, Catherine and Jackie. But Alyce reportedly endured years of infidelity before finally leaving. Jackie stayed out of the spotlight, while Catherine’s relationship with her father grew increasingly strained — to the point where she once sued him over unpaid college expenses. Matters worsened after Falk married actress Shera Danese in 1977.

Catherine claimed Shera gradually restricted her and Jackie’s access to their father, saying she felt shut out and unwelcome, especially during Falk’s final years. Shera denied the accusations through her attorney, saying she acted solely in Peter’s best interests as his health deteriorated.

And it deteriorated fast.

In 2008, Falk underwent hip surgery, a procedure that should have been routine. But afterward, according to his doctor Stephen Read, his cognitive function declined sharply. Falk already showed signs of dementia, but the surgery seemed to accelerate the decline dramatically. Alzheimer’s began to steal his memories, his awareness, and eventually the role that defined him. Near the end of his life, Peter Falk — the man who embodied one of television’s sharpest minds — no longer remembered ever playing Columbo.

The loss was heartbreaking for his loved ones and for fans around the world. To think that the man whose mind had once navigated layers of clues and deception with ease could no longer recall any of it felt painfully ironic.

Peter Falk died in June 2011 at his Beverly Hills home, at age 83. Pneumonia, combined with complications from Alzheimer’s, ended the life of a man who had entertained millions. Tributes poured in from across the entertainment industry. Steven Spielberg said, “I learned more about acting from him at that early stage of my career than from anyone else.” Many echoed the sentiment: Falk was not just talented — he was transformative.

Even after his death, family tensions persisted. Catherine said she wasn’t informed until hours after he passed and that she had been prevented from saying goodbye. Shera, through her attorney, insisted the funeral arrangements were private matters based on Peter’s wishes, not those of an estranged daughter. It was a bitter ending to an already fractured relationship.

Yet none of the turmoil could overshadow what Falk gave the world. His warmth, humor, and unmistakable charm shaped one of television’s greatest characters. Columbo was more than a show — it was a lesson in subtle performance, timing, and emotional intelligence. Fans still rewatch the episodes today, not just for nostalgia, but because the character remains endlessly satisfying — a detective whose curiosity, kindness, and persistence always led to the truth.

Peter Falk’s life was complicated, flawed, brilliant, and deeply human. He lived with a disability, battled personal demons, faced family conflict, and still became one of the most beloved actors of his era.

He may have forgotten Columbo in his final years — but the world never will.

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