The news hit like a punch to the chest. James Ransone, the raw, electric soul behind Ziggy Sobotka, is gone at 46.
A life carved out of pain, war shadows, addiction, and fragile redemption ended alone in Los Angeles.
Friends, fans, and family are now left with questions, memories, and a silence his voice once fi…
He grew up in the long shadow of war and trauma, the son of a wounded Green Beret who brought home scars no one could see.
Acting wasn’t a hobby; it was a lifeline. At the Carver Center for Arts and Technology, he finally found a place where his jagged edges fit,
where the strange, restless kid could turn his turmoil into art.
That same intensity poured into every role he took: the doomed,
desperate Ziggy in The Wire, the haunted survivors of Sinister and It: Chapter Two, the wired
Marine in Generation Kill that let him stand, for a moment, in the shoes of the young soldier his father once was.
Off screen, he refused to lie about the darkness. He talked about heroin, about getting sober at 27,
about the sexual abuse he endured as a boy. He didn’t package his suffering as a neat redemption arc;
he offered it as proof that survival is messy and ongoing. His death, ruled a suicide,
doesn’t erase that courage. It underlines how ruthless mental illness can be, even for those who fight hardest.
He leaves behind his wife, Jamie, their two children, and a legacy now entwined with the cause of mental health,
as his family channels their grief into support for others still battling what finally claimed him.