Ed Asner, the seven-time Emmy winner who specialized in playing gruff-but-likable characters, has died at age 91. Asner, a Missouri native, served in the military in the 1950s before pursuing acting as a career. He broke into the profession in the late 1950s and appeared in scores of major television programs, generally cast in dramatic roles. He made his big screen debut in an uncredited role in the 1962 Elvis Presley movie "Kid Galahad" starring Elvis Presley. He went on to play a detective in "The Slender Thread" (1966), a nemesis of John Wayne in Howard Hawks' "El Dorado" (1966) and Robert Vaughn's shady C.I.A. boss in "The Venetian Affair" (1966). Asner's distinctive style led him to work almost non-stop between the feature film and television mediums. In 1970, his career skyrocketed when he was cast as Lou Grant, the grumpy boss of Mary Tyler Moore in her iconic TV sitcom. The show proved that Asner was as adept at playing comedy as he was drama. He won multiple Emmy awards for playing Grant and when the series eventually ended, he would win Emmys for playing the same character in the dramatic off-shoot program "Lou Grant". He also won Emmys for two highly-rated 1970s TV minis-series, "Rich Man, Poor Man" and "Roots". Asner's career continued to thrive with a younger generation, as he acted in and provided voice-over performances in major hit films such as "Elf" and "Up". In his personal life, he served as president of the Screen Actors Guild and was a political activist for progressive causes.