Poitier, Sidney
Related Category: Film and Television: Biographies
1927, American actor, b. Miami, raised in the Bahamas, returned to the United States at 15. The first African-American actor to achieve leading man status in Hollywood films, Poitier combines attractiveness and poise with an innate projection of dignity and self-assurance. Many of his plays and films have directly addressed issues of race, including his Broadway triumph, Lorraine
Hansberry's
A Raisin in the Sun (1959, film 1961), and such films as the pioneering
No Way Out (1950), his movie debut; the internationally acclaimed
Cry, the Beloved Country (1951), after Alan
Paton's novel;
The Defiant Ones (1957), the film that established Poitier's reputation;
Lilies of the Field (1963; Academy Award);
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? (1967), which treated the subject of interracial marriage; and
In the Heat of the Night (1967). He turned to directing in 1971; among his films are
Buck and the Preacher (1972),
A Patch of Blue (1973), and
Stir Crazy (1980). In 1991 he portrayed Thurgood
Marshall in the Emmy-winning television film
Separate but Equal.
See his autobiographies, This Life (1980) and The Measure of a Man (2000); biography by A. Goudsouzian (2004).