Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Entertainment
Richard Winton and Jonah Valdez

Autopsy to determine how Leslie Jordan died as mourning fans flock to crash site

LOS ANGELES — Authorities are trying to determine a cause of death for Leslie Jordan, the beloved comedy actor who died Monday after his car crashed into a building in Hollywood.

The Los Angeles County coroner plans an autopsy Tuesday on Jordan, 67, who was declared dead at the scene after the BMW he was driving slammed into a building at Cahuenga Boulevard and Romaine Street.

It was not immediately clear whether Jordan was killed in the crash or suffered a medical emergency beforehand, but the condition of the vehicle suggested he may have lost control of the car, a law enforcement source said.

Black skid marks from Cahuenga Boulevard led over the curb and onto the sidewalk where Jordan’s BMW struck the building’s metal facade around 9:30 a.m. and dented it.

Jordan won an Emmy in 2006 for his performance as the snide Beverley Leslie in the hit TV show “Will & Grace” and became an internet sensation during the pandemic.

The diminutive dandy — Jordan was 4 feet 11 and openly gay — was celebrated as an LGBTQ icon who expanded the possibilities of queer identity on and off the screen.

As news of his death circulated Monday, police continued to investigate the crash scene while fans created a makeshift memorial at the intersection.

Joey Wiser and Felipe Araipa dropped by on their way home. Both grew up watching Jordan on “Will & Grace” and were among the millions who enjoyed his amusing pandemic dispatches on Instagram.

“I think it brought a lot of us together in a time when we were not sure what was going on,” Wiser said of Jordan’s social media antics.

Chloë Phoenix, who drove to the site with her mother, Jessie, and sister Jazmine, gleefully pulled out her phone and grinned while watching one of Jordan’s viral videos, where he spins with a baton in hand and yells, “Daddy, watch me twirl!”

The sisters said they admired how Jordan represented the LGBTQ community. Their mother said Jazmine was in tears after learning about his death.

“Not a lot of celebrities touch you in that way,” Jessie Phoenix said after the family lit a prayer candle alongside flowers. “This was a total crush for us.”

———

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.