“Columbo,” with his wrinkled raincoat and cigar, became one of TV’s most iconic detectives. Peter Falk’s brilliant performance earned him four Emmys as the clever but scruffy sleuth who always caught the killer with “one last detail.”
But Falk’s real life was far more complicated. According to the biography Beyond Columbo, he smoked and drank heavily, was a womanizer, and struggled as a husband and father.
Falk lost his right eye at age three due to cancer and wore a prosthetic his whole life, which gave him his famous squint. Despite this, he was active in sports and later found major success in Hollywood, earning two Oscar nominations before becoming TV’s highest-paid actor.
His personal life, however, was troubled. He married college sweetheart Alyce Mayo in 1960, adopted two daughters, Catherine and Jackie, and divorced 16 years later. Catherine later described a strained relationship, especially after Falk married actress Shera Danese, claiming she was kept away from her father.
Peter Falk died in 2011 at age 83 from pneumonia and complications of Alzheimer’s. In his final years, he no longer remembered playing Columbo. Tributes poured in, with Steven Spielberg praising him as a major influence. But Catherine said she wasn’t allowed to say goodbye, deepening the family rift that remained until the end.