Sidney Poiter was born prematurely in Miami, where his parents made a regular
voyage from the Bahamas to sell their crop of tomatoes. The infant weighed only three
pounds; his dejected father went to look for a shoebox in which to bury the child.
Miraculously, Poitier survived - his birth served as a fitting tableau for a lifetime of
shattering the odds against him. His career has been not only a trailblazing example for
the black actors who have followed him, but a beacon in Hollywood against racism. As
Vincent Canby of The New York Times said: "Poitier does not make movies, he makes
milestones." The youngest of eight siblings,
Poitier was raised on Cat Island and Nassau, in the Bahamas. He dropped out of school at
age thirteen (he had only gone one and one half years) to work full-time to help support
the family. At sixteen, after living for a year with his brother in Miami, Poitier arrived
in New York City with only three dollars in his pocket. For food and shelter, he lied
about his age to get into the Army and served a short stint before finding himself back in
New York washing dishes. While looking for a second job, Poitier saw an ad scouting for
actors. Barely literate, with no acting experience, he auditioned for the American Negro
Theatre and was laughed off the stage. Six months later he returned better prepared, and
landed a role in Days of Our Youth. Poitier did ten more plays with the company before
winning a role in No Way Out, his feature-film debut.
In the '50s and '60s, Poitier embarked on a streak of
cinematic firsts for black actors. He was the first black actor to be nominated for a Best
Actor Academy Award, for The Defiant Ones, in 1958, and the first to win the Best Actor
nod, for Lilies on the Field, in 1963. In 1968, Poitier became the first black No. 1
box-office star with his role in 1967's Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. Poitier's characters
had a common thread: they were intelligent, rational men - non-threatening to whites but
exhibiting a quiet dignity and controlled anger. In In the Heat of the Night, when Rod
Steiger's redneck sheriff asks Poitier's Virgil Tibbs, "What do they call you,
boy?" he responds, "They call me Mr. Tibbs." It became one of Poitier's
most celebrated lines, a quiet demand for respect that reverberated throughout filmdom.
Some have argued that Poitier was perfectly tailored to become the first major black film
star because he seemed devoid of any menace - indeed, one critic called him a
"chocolate-dipped Mary Poppins."
When he was still at the height of his success as an
actor, Poitier turned his skills to directing. His first film, Buck and Preacher, starred
Harry Belafonte, for whom he had understudied during his days with the American Negro
Theatre. He went on to direct several comedies, including Uptown Saturday Night and Let's
Do It Again with Bill Cosby, and Stir Crazy with Richard Pryor and Gene Wilder. After a
long hiatus from acting, Poitier returned in the late eighties with a pair of fine
thrillers, Shoot To Kill and Little Nikita.
While Poitier's career was a door-opener for many, he
prefers that the door to his personal life remain closed. He has six daughters by two
wives, and he keeps the press largely restricted to the promotion of his work. He is
modest about the importance of his career: "I've been extremely fortunate in that
I've been a party to some very interesting films. I don't deny that I've brought something
to them. But once the magic is made, one has to keep an eye on all the component elements,
not just the corner that might shine the brightest." Now in his seventies, Poitier's
roles finally match the stature he has attained. He portrayed Nelson Mandela in the
made-for-TV movie Mandela & DeKlerk, and in April of 1997, he was appointed to the
real-life role of ambassador to Japan for the Bahamas. |
P. Diddy at the MTV Video Music Awards


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Black Hotel Owners

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