Betsy Arakawa, a classical musician and small-business owner who was married to Gene Hackman and helped edit his novels, was found dead with him at their home in Santa Fe, N.M., the local authorities said on Thursday. She was 65.
Sheriff’s deputies found the bodies of Ms. Arakawa and Mr. Hackman, 95, along with one of their dogs, on Wednesday afternoon, according to a statement from the Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Department. The cause of death was unclear and under investigation.
[Update: Ms. Arakawa died from the effects of hantavirus, a rare disease linked to rodents that can cause respiratory failure, and the cause of Mr. Hackman’s death was heart disease, the authorities in New Mexico said after this obituary was published.]
Mr. Hackman was nominated for five Academy Awards and won two during a 40-year acting career. In his later years, he became a published author, writing three historical novels, and he attributed his writing style, in part, to Ms. Arakawa.
Mr. Hackman would write his books with pen and paper, and Ms. Arakawa would type them up on a computer, making edits or sharing thoughts on characters with him, according to Barbara Lenihan, a friend of the couple for nearly 35 years.
“She was very involved with what he did,” Ms. Lenihan said. “She made it very possible for him to do it.”
Betsy Machiko Arakawa was born on Dec. 15, 1959, and grew up in Honolulu. She began playing the piano at a young age. At 11, as a sixth grader at Kahala Elementary School, she performed in front of thousands of students at the Honolulu International Center Concert Hall, now the Neal S. Blaisdell Center. She later performed with the Honolulu Symphony Orchestra, now the Hawai’i Symphony Orchestra.