Celebrity Celebrity Deaths Celebrity Death News Don Cheadle Remembers Betty White's 'Overflowing Generosity' on 'The Golden Palace' "She was the goldenest of them all and will be forever missed," Don Cheadle wrote of his Golden Palace costar Betty White, who died on New Year's Eve at age 99 By Glenn Garner Glenn Garner Glenn Garner is a form writer-reporter who worked heavily with PEOPLE's Movies and TV verticals. He left PEOPLE in 2023. People Editorial Guidelines Published on January 2, 2022 03:31PM EST Don Cheadle is fondly remembering his time working with Betty White. The Academy Award nominee, 57, paid tribute to the late beloved actress and comedian Friday on Twitter, following the news of her death at age 99. "Betty was the best of the best," Cheadle started his post. He and White starred together in the Golden Girls spinoff The Golden Palace, which ran for one season between 1992 and 1993 on CBS. Following the parent show's finale, it saw White's character Rose running a Miami hotel with Blanche (Rue McClanahan) and Sophia (Estelle Getty), sans Bea Arthur's Dorothy. Betty White Reveals Her Secrets to a Happy Life at 100: 'I'm So Lucky to Be in Such Good Health' Cheadle played Roland Wilson, one of two members of the hotel's previous staff (including Cheech Marin as Chuy Castillos) that stayed on after the trio bought the business. For more on Betty White, listen below to our daily podcast on PEOPLE Every Day. "When we were shooting scenes together it was difficult for the DP to get the lighting right between my chocolate and Betty's white! She was either a ghost or I was the shadow," he recounted in a two-part tweet. "I came on set one day and Betty had darkened her make up/hair a bit in an attempt to accommodate for it." "Nobody asked her to do it. And that's just one small example of her overflowing generosity. My dogs thank her too. She gave us our veterinarian reco who we still see to this day. She was the goldenest of them all and will be forever missed," Cheadle wrote, sharing a promo image of himself and White. White "died peacefully in her sleep" in the early morning hours of New Year's Eve, her agent and close friend Jeff Witjas confirmed to PEOPLE on Friday. Her death came days before she was set to celebrate her 100th birthday on Jan. 17. CBS via Getty "I'm so lucky to be in such good health and feel so good at this age. It's amazing," White told PEOPLE in this week's cover story. "I try to avoid anything green. I think it's working," she joked of her secret to a long life. Producers of White's centennial birthday special Betty White: 100 Years Young have assured that they "will go forward" with the film's one-day release in select theaters on Jan. 17.