Jesse Lee Soffer Leaves Chicago PD, Heart Surgery Plot and 10 Years of Show

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Fans of NBC’s long-running crime drama show Chicago PD have been saddened to hear that longtime on the show Jesse Lee Soffer has decided to leave.

On Aug. 30, 38-year-old actor Soffer announced on Twitter that he was leaving Chicago PD and that the upcoming tenth season of the popular NBC show would be his last.

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Sharing a Variety post about his exit from the show, he said, “It’s sad but it’s true. I just want to let all my fans know how grateful I am…I love you all ❤” Soffer told Variety the day before, on August 28, for the first time, that he plans to leave Chicago PD.

Jesse Lee Soffer

Did Jesse Lee Soffer Have Heart Surgery? Is he ill?

Jesse Lee Soffer did not have heart surgery. He wasn’t very sick either. The American actor is in great shape and in excellent health.

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Some of his fans were also concerned about the sudden manner in which he left the NBC show Chicago PD. But he said nothing about his health when saying he was leaving. So he must live in good health.

Also, Jesse Lee Soffer plays a detective named Jay Halstead on the show. Jay Halstead is a member of the CPD Intelligence Unit. Pat Halstead, his father, was unwell and had heart problems.

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When he went to the hospital, Dr. Connor looked at him and decided that Pat needed heart surgery. But Connor also told Pat about the option that didn’t include surgery. Will said it wouldn’t be long, but Pat wasn’t listening, saying he already knew what he wanted.

Pat finally agreed to heart surgery after saying no all those times. While the surgery was being performed, Will and Jay waited outside. Will was more concerned than Jay, who said everything would be fine. Will then tried to explain to his father why he should watch what he ate, but his father stopped him by holding him.

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Detective Jay will be leaving Chicago PD after Season 10

Jesse Lee Soffer, who played Detective Jay Halstead in the Chicago PD franchise for nearly a decade, including his debut on Chicago Fire, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit and the spin-off show Chicago Med, has decided to direct the series leaving.

He said on Twitter that season 10 would be the last time fans will see him as Detective Jay. In his statement, he said, “I want to thank the amazing fans for their unwavering support over the past 10 years.”

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Soffer first played Jay on NBC’s Chicago Fire in 2013. He appeared in 18 episodes and had a recurring role. After a year, the first episode of Chicago PD came out and his character became a regular, starring in 159 episodes over nine seasons.

Halstead is a fan favorite and one of the most important characters on the show. His marriage to Hailey Upton was the main story of Season 9.

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Fans were shocked to hear that Jesse Lee Soffer would be leaving Chicago PD at the end of Season 10. Variety says Soffer will be stepping down from his role as Detective Jay Halstead early next season, leaving a big void on the show.

How rich will Jesse Lee Soffer be in 2022?

Celebrity Net Worth says Emmy-nominated CSI: Miami actor Jesse Lee Soffer has a net worth of $5 million.

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Soffer’s main source of income is from acting, but he’s also expected to make money from other things like brand promotions and commercials.

Also, his Chicago PD co-star Jason Beghe is a very experienced and talented actor who has a net worth of $9 million as of mid-2022.

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Jesse Lee Soffer
Jesse Lee Soffer

Jesse Lee Soffer Bio/Wiki

Soffer began acting at the age of six and landed a role in a Kix cereal commercial. In 1993, aged just eight, he made his feature film debut with John Goodman and Cathy Moriarty. The film was called Matinee.

In the 1994 drama Safe Passage, Soffer played the role of Percival. Soffer played Bobby Brady in the 1995 comedy The Brady Bunch Movie. A year later he did the same in the sequel A Very Brady Sequel. Soffer played Jamie Kincaid, a runaway-turned-detective, in the TV movie From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. This was another example of her working with Oscar-caliber and A-list actors. He worked with director Richard Shepard on the AMC television movie The Royale. Soffer was cast as Taylor Donovan in the 1998 ABC sitcom Two of a Kind alongside Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen.

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Soffer returned to television after graduating from high school. In 2004, he began playing Will Munson, a troubled teenager, on the CBS soap opera As the World Turns. He played the role until April 4, 2008. By 2008, he had been nominated three times for the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Actor in a Drama Series for his work on ATWT. He was also nominated for a Soap Opera Digest Award for Outstanding Younger Lead Actor in 2005. In 2007, Soffer returned to acting in films. He co-starred with Carly Schroeder in the sports drama Gracie, based on a true story and directed by Davis Guggenheim. Soffer played Will Munson again in As the World Turns in July 2010. In 2011, Soffer starred in the sci-fi action film In Time, which was about a dystopian future. Since then, he has guest-starred on several TV shows including CSI: Miami, The Mentalist, and Rizzoli & Isles. In 2012, he played Nate Devlin, the quick-witted brother of Dr. Grace Devlin, in the short-lived Fox hospital drama The Mob Doctor, starring Jordana Spiro (Spiro). Later that year he played Travis Alexander in Jodi Arias: Dirty Little Secret which was filmed by Lifetime.

In June 2013, news broke that Soffer had joined the cast of the NBC police procedural drama Chicago PD as Detective Jay Halstead. This was the first spin-off show from the drama Fire. Halstead was added to Chicago Fire in season two. Chicago PD’s first show aired on January 8, 2014. On the show, Soffer does his own stunts.

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Soffer was in the first episode of the second season of the comedy/talk web series Talking Marriage with Ryan Bailey on YouTube which aired September 24, 2014.

How I grew up and went to school

Jesse Lee Soffer was born on April 23, 1984 in Ossining, New York. His parents are Jill Hindes (née Bruning) and Stan Soffer. In 1993, when he was nine years old, his father died. From his mother’s second marriage, Soffer has two younger half-sisters named Shayne and Jenna Hindes. Craig and Melisa Soffer, who are older than him, are his father’s children by his first marriage. Soffer grew up part of his childhood in Tarrytown, New York. At the age of 10 he moved to Newtown, Connecticut.

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Soffer went to boarding school at The Gunnery and graduated in 2003.

He played soccer at school and was named to the prep school All-Star team in his senior year. He went to school at New York University (NYU).

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Jesse Lee Soffer’s career

At the age of 6, Soffer landed a role in a Kix cereal commercial, which was the beginning of his acting career. In 1993, at just eight years old, he made his film debut in a feature-length film called Matinee, starring John Goodman and Cathy Moriarty.

In the 1994 drama Safe Passage, Soffer played the role of Percival. Soffer played Bobby Brady in the 1995 comedy The Brady Bunch Movie. A year later he did the same in the sequel A Very Brady Sequel. Soffer played Jamie Kincaid, a runaway-turned-detective, in the TV movie From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. This was another example of her working with Oscar-caliber and A-list actors. He worked with director Richard Shepard on the AMC television movie The Royale. Soffer was cast as Taylor Donovan in the 1998 ABC sitcom Two of a Kind alongside Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen. In 1999, he was the first to play the role of Max Nickerson on the CBS soap opera Guiding Light. He left the show after four months to focus on his studies.

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Soffer returned to television after graduating from high school. In 2004, he began playing Will Munson, a troubled teenager, on the CBS soap opera As the World Turns. He played the role until April 4, 2008. By 2008, he had been nominated three times for the Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Younger Actor in a Drama Series for his work on ATWT. He was also nominated for a Soap Opera Digest Award for Outstanding Younger Lead Actor in 2005. In 2007, Soffer returned to acting in films. He co-starred with Carly Schroeder in the sports drama Gracie, based on a true story and directed by Davis Guggenheim. Soffer again played Will Munsen in As the World Turns in July 2010. He was cast in an episode of Dick Wolf’s Law & Order: SVU while on As the World Turns. But he couldn’t film because he already had plans to film something else. [14] In 2011, Soffer starred in the sci-fi action film In Time, which was about a dystopian future.

Since then, he has guest-starred on several TV shows including CSI: Miami, The Mentalist, and Rizzoli & Isles. In 2012, he played Nate Devlin, the quick-witted brother of Dr. Grace Devlin, in the short-lived Fox hospital drama The Mob Doctor, starring Jordana Spiro (Spiro). Later that year he played Travis Alexander in Jodi Arias: Dirty Little Secret which was filmed by Lifetime.

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In June 2013, Soffer was said to have joined the cast of the NBC police procedural drama Chicago PD as Det. Jay Halstead. This was the first show to branch off from the Chicago Fire drama.

Halstead was introduced in the first episode of the second season of Chicago Fire. Chicago PD’s first show aired on January 8, 2014. The show was picked up by NBC for a second season on March 19, 2014. Season two officially begins on September 24, 2014, according to NBC. Soffer does his own stunts on the show.

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