Anthony Herrera


Anthony John Herrera was an American actor.

Early life and family background

Herrera was born on January 19, 1944, in Wiggins, Mississippi, to Theresa Jewel and Rafael Antonio Herrera. His biological grandfather was French-born Gaston Louis Malécot, an instructor at Columbia University and a World War I veteran.
Reared in Stone County, Mississippi by his maternal grandparents, he graduated from Wiggins High School. He earned a bachelor's degree from the University of Mississippi and was a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. He was the biological father of actress Gaby Hoffmann. Hoffmann and Herrera were estranged shortly after her birth, and she was raised by her mother, Viva, in the Chelsea Hotel.

Career

Herrera's professional acting career began in 1969. He became best known for his role as the evil James Stenbeck on the soap opera As the World Turns, a role he played periodically between 1980 and 2010. Herrera also played Mark Galloway in 1974 and 1975 on the same show. From the fall of 1975 to 1977, he played Jack Curtis, a college professor who cheated on his wife, driving her to obesity, on The Young and the Restless, and played Dane Hammond on Loving from 1984–1986 and again in 1990-91.
Herrera produced and directed a short documentary titled Mississippi Delta Blues, about the life of James "Son" Thomas. In 1987, he wrote and directed an episode of American Playhouse titled "The Wide Net", starring Kyra Sedgwick. He also appeared as Lee Falk's Mandrake the Magician, alongside Ji-Tu Cumbuka as Lothar, in a failed TV series pilot.

Last years: Cancer and death

Herrera was diagnosed with mantle cell lymphoma, an aggressive and normally lethal type of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, in 1997. He went to Memorial Sloan-Kettering and underwent chemotherapy, total body irradiation, and an autologous stem cell transplant, but all these treatments were unsuccessful. In 1999, he received an allogenic stem cell transplant using bone marrow donated from his brother, John. Herrera's disease went into remission for at least nine years, and was considered a "pioneer case" and proof that donor stem cells could induce long-term remission.
In 2005, Herrera wrote a book about his experiences, which he titled The Cancer War. In October of that year he testified before U.S. Congress on the importance of stem cell research. In October 2010, Herrera was the featured guest speaker at the Cardiology & Oncology International Symposium in Nashville, Tennessee. His cancer came out of remission, and he died of it on June 21, 2011, at the age of 67, in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Partial filmography