Anthony Guidera, a character actor whose film debut as a bodyguard in “The Godfather Part III” launched a three-decade Hollywood career that included memorable turns in “Species” and “Armageddon,” died June 6, 2026. He was 65.
Guidera collapsed in the living room of his Southern California home on May 11, 2026, when his heart abruptly stopped beating. His wife, Valarie Anderson, had him rushed to a nearby hospital and placed on life support, where he remained for three weeks as doctors worked to determine what had triggered the cardiac event. He was ultimately taken off life support per his prior directive, allowing him to be brought home for a natural death.
Anderson announced his death in a Facebook post on June 6, writing, “It is with heavy hearts that we announce the sudden passing of our beloved Anthony,” and asking friends and fans to “hold this eternal light in your hearts and our family in your prayers.”
The announcement was echoed by Astara, the spiritual foundation organization in Palos Verdes Estates, California, where Guidera — known to members as “Reverend Anthony” — had volunteered alongside his wife. He is survived by Anderson and the couple’s son, Nick.
From San Francisco to the Corleone Family
Born on October 18, 1960, in San Francisco, California, Guidera spent nearly a decade in Paris after college, modeling under the name James Guidera, studying theatre at the Théâtre Marie Stuart under theatre director Robert Cordier, and training in New York at acting teacher Robert Lewis’ Master Class, one of the original programs linked to the founders of the Actors Studio. Returning to the U.S. in the early 1990s, he landed his very first film role in Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Godfather Part III,” playing a bodyguard named Anthony — a part that came to be credited as “Anthony the Bodyguard.” The role placed the newcomer alongside legends including Al Pacino, Diane Keaton and Andy García in one of the most anticipated sequels in cinema history.
An Award-Winning Kiss in “Species”
Perhaps his most iconic role came in 1995, when Guidera was cast as Robbie Llywelyn, the diabetic man seduced and killed by actress Natasha Henstridge’s alien hybrid Sil in director Roger Donaldson’s sci-fi thriller “Species.” The unforgettable scene earned Guidera and Henstridge the MTV Movie Award for Best Kiss — a pop-culture honor that turned a supporting role into a genre-cinema milestone.
Throughout the 1990s, he became a familiar face on screens both big and small, appearing in “The Rock” (1996), “Precious Find” (1996), “‘Til There Was You” (1997), “The Postman” (1997), “Armageddon” (1998) and “The Annihilation of Fish” (1999). His final film credit came in 2005 with “L.A. Dicks.”
A Familiar Face on Television
Guidera was equally prolific on television, building a long list of guest appearances that spanned virtually every popular genre of the 1990s and early 2000s. In 1993 alone, he appeared on “Renegade,” “Baywatch” and “Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.” He went on to take roles in “Valley of the Dolls” (1994), “Baywatch Nights” (1996), “Nash Bridges” (1997), “The Pretender” (1999), “Angel” (2000), “V.I.P.” (2001) and “ER” (2001).
Colleagues and fans have flooded social media since the news of his death broke, sharing memories of the actor’s warmth on set and the indelible characters he created — often in just a scene or two.
A Mystery That May Never Be Solved
Anderson told TMZ that doctors were unable to determine what caused the cardiac arrest, leaving the family without answers. Even after his passing, the circumstances surrounding his collapse remain unresolved.
What remains most haunting about Guidera’s death is how suddenly it arrived. A healthy 65-year-old man collapsed without warning in his own home, and nearly a month later his family is still grappling with the fact that medical professionals could not explain why.
For now, the family is focused on remembering the husband, father and performer they lost. Guidera’s son, Nick, and widow Valarie Anderson are left to navigate a grief made sharper by uncertainty.







