British actor Anthony Stewart Head, best known for playing the bookish Watcher Rupert Giles on “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” died on June 5, 2026, at the age of 72. His family confirmed he passed away from complications due to pneumonia, marking the third death of a “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” cast member in less than two years and reigniting fan talk of a so-called “Buffy curse.”
For millions of fans worldwide, Head will always be remembered as Giles — the tweedy, sword-wielding mentor who brought gravitas, warmth and a hidden rock-and-roll edge to seven seasons of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer.” The show ran from 1997 to 2003 and aired 144 episodes. He appeared in 121 episodes of the series and later lent his voice to two “Buffy” video games and the audio drama “Slayers: A Buffyverse Story.”
A String of Losses Haunts the Cast
Head’s passing marks the third death among the core cast in less than two years. Nicholas Brendon, who portrayed fan-favorite Xander Harris, died in March 2026 at the age of 54. A coroner ruled Brendon’s death was caused by atherosclerotic and hypertensive cardiovascular disease with acute pneumonia and previous myocardial infarction as contributing factors. Michelle Trachtenberg, who played Buffy’s younger sister Dawn, died in 2025 from complications of diabetes mellitus.
The losses have been compounded by behind-the-scenes setbacks for the franchise. In March 2026, it emerged that Hulu had abruptly scrapped plans for a previously announced “Buffy” reboot.
Head was also navigating profound personal grief at the time of his death. He was predeceased by his longtime partner, animal welfare activist Sarah Fisher, who died unexpectedly in January 2025 at the age of 61. The couple had been together since 1982.
From Coffee Ads to Cult Stardom
Born on February 20, 1954, in Camden, London, Head came from a creative family. His father, Seafield Head, was a documentary filmmaker, and his mother, Helen Shingler, was an actor. His older brother, Murray Head, is also an actor and the singer behind the 1984 hit “One Night in Bangkok.”
Before “Buffy” made him a transatlantic star, Head became a household name in Britain in the 1980s as one half of a will-they, won’t-they couple in a long-running series of advertisements for Nescafé Gold Blend instant coffee. The campaign proved so popular that the spots were later re-shot for American audiences to promote Taster’s Choice.
“Buffy” creator Joss Whedon cast Head as Rupert Giles in 1997, and the role made him a fixture of late-1990s pop culture. His career later stretched from West End musicals to cult television, capped by a late-career renaissance as the wickedly charming villain Rupert Mannion on “Ted Lasso.”
Head’s post-“Buffy” career was prolific and varied. He played King Uther Pendragon, the father of the future King Arthur, on the BBC fantasy series “Merlin,” and appeared as a hapless prime minister in the comedy sketch show “Little Britain.” In 2011, he portrayed Geoffrey Howe, the deputy to Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, opposite Meryl Streep in the Oscar-winning film “The Iron Lady.”
A new generation discovered him as Rupert Mannion on “Ted Lasso,” the smarmy, manipulative ex-husband of Hannah Waddingham’s Rebecca Welton and former owner of AFC Richmond.
Tributes Pour In From Co-Stars
Sarah Michelle Gellar, who played the title role opposite Head for all seven seasons, paid tribute on Instagram on June 5, opening with a line from the show’s series finale. “Tell Giles I figured it out and I’m OK. Well, I don’t have it figured out, and I’m not OK,” she wrote. “But I know I’m the lucky one because I knew you. Thank you to Daisy and Emily who not only shared their dad with me, but with the world.”
James Marsters, who played the platinum-blond vampire Spike, wrote on Facebook that there was “a hole in the World.” He called Head “an unflaggingly kind and steady presence on the set of Buffy, and the best actor in the cast,” adding, “He was the best of us. I was lucky to have known, and learned from him.”
David Boreanaz, who played the vampire Angel opposite Head for the first three seasons of “Buffy,” remembered him as “so kind and generous of a soul.” Alyson Hannigan, who played witch Willow Rosenberg, wrote that the loss was “so deep I fear it can never heal.” Charisma Carpenter, who played cheerleader-turned-demon-fighter Cordelia Chase, said Head “brought life to a character who, for so many, was the father figure they needed but didn’t have at home.” Brett Goldstein, who played Roy Kent on “Ted Lasso,” captured the paradox of Head’s career neatly: “He was a brilliant actor who played the worst person in the world, which was an incredible skill because he was the best person.”
“Our grief is far greater than the hole he has left behind,” his daughters said, “but we know his legacy will live on, in the shows he was a part of, and in the audiences that love them.”
