Marcus York, actor from ‘The Office,’ untimely death at 55

Marcus York, actor from ‘The Office,’ untimely death at 55

Marcus York, the actor, and inventor who played Billy Merchant on “The Office” opposite Steve Carell, has died at 55.

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From “Going all the Way” movie

The following written content from Rob Bailey-Millado

The actor passed away in the “early morning of May 19th at Miami Valley Hospital following a brief and unexpected illness,” according to an obituary posted by Kreitzer Funeral Home, which is located near his hometown of Arcanum, Ohio, where he grew up.

The exact cause of death has not been disclosed.

York played Merchant — properties manager of the Scranton office park where Dunder Mifflin is located — during Seasons 2 through 5 of NBC’s cult classic sitcom. His recurring character was, like York, a paraplegic, and experienced many an awkward encounter with Carell’s bumbling branch manager Michael Scott.

“The Office” actor Rainn Wilson, 55, was the first co-star to pay public homage: “He was a terrific human, a positive force and a dynamic actor. You will be missed.”

York had been paraplegic since 1988, when he suffered “an almost fatal, life-changing auto accident,” according to the bio on his personal website. That near-death experience led him back to school — and into acting.

“He had such an outgoing, uplifting, positive attitude and personality. He always tried to look at what he could accomplish and do, not what he couldn’t do,” his obit reads. “He had experienced many travel opportunities and many dreams for the future. In the past several years, he had been working as an inventor, and had obtained two patents for his inventions.”

The Arcanum High School alum was a triple-major graduate of Anderson University in nearby Indiana, where he had done some print modeling before he was encouraged by several friends to head west to pursuing acting in California.

Credited as Marcus A. York on his IMDb profile, the actor also guest starred on “CSI: New York” and “8 Simple Rules” with John Ritter and appeared in uncredited roles in Steven Spielberg’s 2001 film “A.I.: Artificial Intelligence” and the 1997 indie “Going All the Way” opposite Ben Affleck. Read more from NYPost

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