T.K. Carter, Veteran Actor Known for The Thing and Punky Brewster, Dies at 69
The news didn’t explode — it spread slowly, almost quietly. But once it landed, it hit hard. Thomas Kent Carter, the multi-talented actor and comedian widely known as T.K. Carter, passed away on January 9, 2026, at his home in Duarte, California. He was 69.
Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department deputies responded to a call about an unresponsive male at Carter’s residence. He was declared dead at the scene, with no foul play suspected. The Los Angeles County Medical Examiner later confirmed the cause of death as systolic heart failure, with atrial fibrillation and pulmonary hypertension listed as contributing factors.
Born Thomas Kent Carter on December 18, 1956 in New York and raised in Southern California, Carter began performing stand-up comedy at just 12 years old. His life between both coasts shaped the rare balance of intensity and ease that would define his presence on screen for decades.
His breakthrough came in 1982 with John Carpenter’s iconic sci-fi horror film The Thing, where he played Nauls the cook — a role that introduced him to a global audience. From there, Carter built a steady, trusted career role by role: Southern Comfort (1981), Runaway Train (1985), Space Jam (1996), and the beloved sitcom Punky Brewster, where he became a household name.
He didn’t chase the spotlight. He earned loyalty. Colleagues described him as patient, grounded, and deeply respectful — the kind of actor others wanted on set not for the fame, but for how he carried himself. His final television credit came in 2023 on The Company You Keep.
Carter is survived by his wife, Janet Carter. When news of his passing spread, fans began revisiting old clips and old moments — realizing just how often T.K. Carter had quietly been part of their lives.
His career was not built on one iconic moment, but on consistency — on showing up, again and again, without needing the attention. And that, perhaps, is the rarest kind of legacy.