A family friend first reported his passing on Hawaii outlet KITV; she did not provide a cause of death. Hawaii Five-0 producer Peter M. Lenkov also confirmed the news on social media, sharing a photo of him with Wily.
“I am devastated. Heartbroken,” Lenkov wrote. He later posted a more lengthy tribute:
“T, as I told you many times, I fell in love with you at the first audition. You came in with a towel on your head mopping up sweat, and I was smitten. You charmed me into making you a regular… on the show… and in my life. You were family. And I will miss you every day, brother.”
Wily is best known to audiences for playing informant Kamekona Tupuola on the long-running CBS series. But long before achieving fame as an actor, Wily was a successful sumo wrestler and MMA fighter.
Born Teila Tuli on June 14, 1968 in Honolulu, Hawaii, Wily began his sumo career in 1987 under the name Takamikuni. Weighing 440 pounds, he was one of the largest wrestlers in the sport and one of the rare foreign-born competitors to have success in the traditionally Japanese competition.
He was unbeaten in his first 14 bouts and won two consecutive championships, and was the first foreign-born wrestler to become champion in the makushita division, the sport’s third-highest division. He retired in 1989 due to knee problems.
Wily then competed in mixed martial arts, competing in the first-ever Ultimate Fighting Championship in 1993. He lost the fight, but a punch to the face reportedly broke his competitor’s hand, and he holds a unique place in the sport’s history as the first person to lose a UFC brawl.
“There was a different feeling when you walked through that octagon,” Wily told the New York Post in 2018. “I was scared. I ain’t lying, I was scared.”
“Now when I look back on it, now that I’m more mature, I’m just grateful to God to just have the opportunity to risk it. Because how many times are you going to have the opportunity to risk something that nobody else did before.”
Years later, Wily would reemerge in a more lucrative and less violent career as a Hollywood actor. He had his breakthrough in the 2008 comedy Forgetting Sarah Marshall as Kemo, a friendly cook at a Hawaiian resort.
He then landed his best-known role as Kamekona Tupuola on the 2010 reboot of Hawaii Five-0, a reformed criminal and shave ice stand owner who serves as an informant to the titular police department.
Making his debut in the pilot, Kamekona became a fan favorite recurring character and was credited as a main character in season 8. He appears in 171 episodes of the series.