Rip Torn, the hell-raising Texas-born actor who in real life was almost as colorful as the outsize characters he played in a 60-year television and movie career, died Tuesday at his home in Lakeville, Connecticut, his publicist said.

He was 88.

No cause of death was given.

Torn — which was his real name — specialized in playing cantankerous, anti-authoritarian authority figures such as Artie, the devious, hard-drinking producer of "The Larry Sanders Show" on the HBO series of the same name, and Agent Zed, the gruff, world-weary head of the secretive, alien-hunting agents in the early "Men in Black" movies.

Torn was nominated for nine Emmy awards and won for supporting actor in a comedy series for his portrayal of Artie in "The Larry Sanders Show" in 1996. He was nominated for an Oscar as best supporting actor for playing the hard-drinking father who meets a tragic end in the 1984 drama "Cross Creek." He was nominated for a Tony Award for his role as the sadistic son in the 1962 Broadway production of Tennessee Williams' play "Sweet Bird of Youth."

"I'll miss you, Rip, you were a true original," actor Albert Brooks, Torn's co-star in the 1991 movie "Defending Your Life," said on Twitter.

"Never think you're better than anyone else, but don't let anyone treat you like you're worse than they are." Rest in peace, Rip Torn, an unapologetic maverick and gifted actor whose singular presence on screens big and small was always welcome. pic.twitter.com/BnQEwzuFgz — Tribeca (@Tribeca) July 10, 2019

Torn — born Elmore Rual Torn Jr. in Temple, Texas, and nicknamed "Rip" by his family — studied Shakespearean acting at Texas A&M University and made his film debut in the 1956 comedy-drama "Baby Doll" under the direction of Elia Kazan.

Rip Torn attends the premiere of "Dodgeball" in 2004. Carlo Allegri / Getty Images

He made a splash in the biblical epic "King of Kings," playing Judas Iscariot, in 1961, the same year he appeared in "Sweet Bird of Youth" on Broadway. Throughout his career, Torn played troubled anti-hero characters — a description that could often be applied to his personal life.

"I have certain flaws in my makeup. Something called irascibility," Torn told Studs Terkel for his 1974 book of interviews, "Working." "I get angry easily. I get saddened by things easily."

Torn sometimes clashed with directors and actors on set, most notably during production of the 1970 movie "Maidstone," when he hit the director, Norman Mailer, on the head with a hammer.

In January 2010, Torn was arrested in Lakeville after he broke into a bank while he was drunk; police said he was so drunk that he simply mistook the bank for his home.

Torn pleaded guilty to reckless endangerment, criminal trespass, criminal mischief and the illegal carrying of a firearm and was handed a suspended sentence and probation.

Torn acknowledged that he could be reckless because he wore his emotions on his sleeve, which he said was likely the reason for his success.

"Since I feel, I can use my feelings at work," he told Terkel in 1974. "In a lot of other types of work I can sweat — I can sweat as an actor — but I can't use my feelings. So that's why I became an actor."

He is survived by his wife, Amy Wright, an actor whom he married in 1989, and six children. Two previous wives, the actors Ann Wedgeworth and Geraldine Page, predeceased him.