Donald Gibb, who starred as the brutish football player Ogre in the 1984 campus comedy classic Revenge of the Nerds, has died.
The actor’s son, Travis, told TMZ that his father died on Tuesday at his home in Texas after suffering from health complications. He was 71.
In Revenge of the Nerds, Frederick Aloysius Palowaski, aka “Ogre” — along with a group of fellow college football teammates from the fictional Adams College — torment the nebbish freshmen Lewis Skolnick (Robert Carradine), Gilbert Lowe (Anthony Edwards), Booger (Curtis Armstrong) and their fellow classmates, dubbed “nerds,” under the guidance of the team’s coach, Harris (John Goodman).
The players, who lost their Alpha Beta frat house to a fire, kick the “nerds” out of their freshman dorm at the beginning of the film. The group of math and computer whizzes, however, concoct a plan of revenge to put the jocks back in their rightful place – in the gym.
Gibb also starred in sequels Revenge of the Nerds II: Nerds in Paradise in 1987 and Revenge of the Nerds IV: Nerds in Love in 1994. The actor did not, however, appear in the 1992 TV movie Revenge of the Nerds III: The Next Generation.
A Close Shave Helped Donald Gibb Land The Role Of Ogre In ‘Revenge Of The Nerds’
Donald Gibb recalled in an interview with Youngstown Studio in 2025 that he landed the role of Ogre in Revenge of the Nerds thanks to the help of his friend, stunt coordinator Terry James, after he was initially told he looked too old to play a college student. As such, Gibb said, the casting director was pushing for a different actor to play Ogre.
However, Gibb added, since Revenge of the Nerds director Jeff Kanew really wanted him for the part, James came up with a plan during auditions to give the actor another chance.
“So, I all of a sudden, I get a call from my buddy and he says, ‘If you can get down here, shaved, you know — get down here as fast as you can,” Gibb told Youngstown Studio. As such, Gibb told the outlet, he had shaved, but he also had “blood squirting out” of his face from close cuts and pieces of toilet paper to cover them up.
After he cleared the mess away, Gibb said he went into another interview “clean shaven and they went, “Okay, he can play the college guy.”
Donald Gibb Appeared In More Than 90 Screen Roles
Born Donald Richard Gibb on Aug. 4, 1954, in New York City, Gibb’s first screen role came in an uncredited turn as a henchman in the Clint Eastwood action comedy Any Which Way You Can.
The bit role in the Eastwood comedy was followed two more high-profile films where Gibb played uncredited roles: as a bouncer in the mud-wrestling bar in Bill Murray’s 1981 comedy Stripes and King Osric’s (Max von Sydow) bodyguard in the 1982 Arnold Schwarzenegger fantasy adventure Conan the Barbarian.
Before landing the role of Ogre in Revenge of the Nerds two years later, Gibb appeared in a string of television guest roles in such series as Alice, Simon & Simon, Hardcastle and McCormick, The A-Team and Magnum: P.I. The same year Gibb hit paydirt with Revenge of the Nerds, he also appeared in the comedy Meatballs 2.
Starting in December 1984, Gibb, who was 6-foot-4, starred as Leslie “Dr. Death” Cruncher — a linebacker for the fictional California Bulls pro football team — in the football-themed sitcom 1st & Ten. Gibb was a cast regular and starred in 69 episodes of the series, which ran six seasons from 1984 to 1991.
Amid his work in the Revenge of the Nerds sequels, Gibb appeared in dozens of more TV guest roles on such series as The Facts of Life, Hunter, Night Court, MacGuyver, Cheers, The X-Files, Boy Meets World, Seinfeld, Weird Science and Hangin’ with Mr. Cooper, as well as the daytime dramas Days of Our Lives and The Young and the Restless.
From 1993 to 1998, Gibb appeared in a recurring role in the Patrick Duffy and Suzanne Sommers sitcom Step by Step. Gibb played Slasher, then Moose, on the series over the course of three seasons.
Apart from the Revenge of the Nerds movies, Gibb appeared in such films as Bloodsport, Bloodsport 2, U.S. Marshals and Hancock.
Gibb’s last credited screen role was in the 2026 sports thriller Hands. According to IMDb, Gibb also has a role in the forthcoming horror film Burlesque Ghost Hunters, which does not yet have a release date.
May 12: This article has been updated with more career information on Donald Gibb.











