He was a T.V. Icon, he will be missed, I really liked "Matlock" R.I.P.
TV legend Andy Griffith dead at 86
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http://storage.canoe.ca/v1/dynamic_resize/sws_path/suns-prod-images/134076742003...Andy Griffith (right) with "Andy Griffith Show" co-star Don Knotts. (Handout)
Andy Griffith as Sheriff Taylor (left) and Don Knotts as Deputy Barney Fife. (Handout)
Cast members from "The Andy Griffith Show", from left: Don Knotts as Deputy Barney Fife, Ron Howard as Opie Taylor and Andy Griffith as Sheriff Andy Taylor, pose in this undated photo made available by Viacom. (File)
The Andy Griffith Show (CBS) 1960-1968. Shown from left: Andy Griffith (as Sheriff Andy Taylor), George Lindsey (as Goober Pyle)
The Andy Griffith Show (CBS) 1960-1968. Shown from left: Andy Griffith (as Sheriff Andy Taylor), George Lindsey, Howard McNear
The Andy Griffith Show (CBS) 1960-1968. Shown from left: Andy Griffith (as Sheriff Andy Taylor), George Lindsey (as Goober Pyle)
Cover of Andy Griffith's album.
U.S. President George W. Bush (R) presents his Presidential Medal of Freedom to actor Andy Griffith at a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington, November 9, 2005. Bush presented the highest civil award recognizing exceptional meritorious service to 14 honorees from the sport, entertainment and political world at the ceremony. REUTERS/Jason Reed
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* 'Goober Pyle' dead at 83
Actor Andy Griffith, whose portrayal of a small-town sheriff made “The Andy Griffith Show” one of American television’s most enduring shows, has died at his North Carolina home, television station WITN reported on Tuesday.
The television station quoted a longtime friend as saying that the 86-year-old actor died at his home on Roanoke Island. The Dare County Sheriff’s dispatcher would say only that an ambulance was called to Griffith’s residence but would not comment further.
Griffith created another memorable character, the folksy defense lawyer in “Matlock” in the 1980s and ‘90s, but it was his portrayal of Sheriff Andy Taylor on the “The Andy Griffith Show” in the 1960s that gave him a place in U.S. television history.
The show portrayed life in the friendly, slow-moving fictional town of Mayberry, North Carolina, which was widely believed to have been based on Griffith’s own hometown, Mount Airy, North Carolina.