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Billy Dee Williams

 
Black Biography: Billy Dee Williams

actor

Personal Information

Born William December Williams, April 6, 1937, in New York, NY; son of December and Loretta Williams; third wife's name, Teruko (divorced); children: Corey, Miyako, Hanako.
Education: Attended High School of Music and Art and National Academy School of Fine Arts, New York, NY.

Career

Stage appearances include Firebrand of Florence, c. 1944, A Taste of Honey, Hallelujah Baby, I Have a Dream, and Fences. Film appearances include The Last Angry Man, 1959; The Out-of-Towners, 1970; Lady Sings the Blues, 1972; Mahogany, 1976; The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings, 1976; The Empire Strikes Back, 1980; Nighthawks, 1981; Return of the Jedi, 1983; Marvin & Tige, 1984; and Batman, 1989. Television appearances include Dynasty, 1980s; and films Brian's Song, 1971; The Scott Joplin Story, 1976; The Jacksons: An American Dream, 1992; Marked for Murder, 1993; and Percy and Thunder, 1993. Presented exhibition of paintings, The Art of Billy Dee Williams, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, 1993.

Life's Work

"I don't want to know about white and black," Billy Dee Williams protested to Gwen Jones of the Los Angeles Herald Examiner in a 1984 interview. "I want people to see my heart, what I feel--not as one of America's best black actors but as one of the best actors." In fact, the actor would make great progress toward that goal over the course of his long and varied career. After logging some time on the stage, Williams got his first big breaks in acting in the early 1970s, landing the dashing male lead in Lady Sings the Blues-- thus establishing himself as a sex symbol--and portraying football star Gale Sayers in Brian's Song. He later played civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr., onstage and musical pioneer Scott Joplin on the small screen, tackled a crucial role in the latter two films of the enormously popular Star Wars series, in which he benefitted from some rare colorblind casting, and took on a variety of smaller film and television roles.

Williams's energy and enthusiasm have dimmed little over the years; he has devoted his nighttime hours since the late 1980s to painting and avid study of Eastern philosophy. As his longtime friend Paul Carter Harrison told Ebony, "Billy is a very serious actor in a frivolous industry."

Born William December Williams--his middle name came from his father--in New York City in 1937, he and his twin sister Loretta were fiercely protected by their mother, also named Loretta, who worked various jobs, including elevator operator in the Lyceum theater. One day Billy, who kept his mother company while she worked, was invited by producer Max Gordon to audition for a walk-on part in the theater's production of German-born composer Kurt Weill's Firebrand of Florence ; he was seven years old. "They had me walk across the stage twice," he recalled to Louise Bernikow of Mademoiselle. "They said, 'Fine, Billy,' but I had caught the bug, right? I wanted to do it a third time. They wouldn't let me, so I started crying, and they had to let me have the part."

As Williams informed Jones, "I can remember when I was a chubby little kid of 12, and all the other guys were getting the girls, I said someday I was going to be like [silent movie idol] Rudolph Valentino." Even so, he has often insisted that he did not choose acting as a profession but rather was chosen by it. Williams attended the High School of Music and Art and later the National Academy School of Fine Arts with the intention of becoming a painter; he took acting jobs to pay for his art supplies.

By his early twenties Williams was working regularly in the theater, first making a splash in A Taste of Honey. He studied acting with, among others, Sidney Poitier. "When I met him he gave me a sense of hope by just watching him moving in a certain kind of way," the younger actor told Ebony. "That certainly gave me the feeling that I've got something to offer, that there is a place for me." He took some film work, including roles in The Last Angry Man and The Out-of-Towners, but soon realized that stardom wasn't around the corner.

After an abortive attempt at a singing career, Williams traveled to Europe, returning to the United States in 1970. The following year he earned the role of football star Gale Sayers in Brian's Song, an Emmy Award-winning television film costarring James Caan. That tale of friendship and tragedy established Williams's credentials as a dramatic actor; a year later he would emerge as a leading man.

Music business legend Berry Gordy, who had branched into film with his Motown pictures company, was sufficiently impressed by Williams's performance to offer him a critical role in Lady Sings the Blues, with singing superstar Diana Ross in the lead. The actor initially was disinclined to take the part since he regarded it as insufficiently serious and doubted Ross's ability as an actress.

Ultimately accepting the part, Williams played Louis McKay, who becomes involved with ill-fated jazz singer Billie Holiday. Ross earned an Academy Award for her portrayal of Holiday, while Williams's role in the film was a milestone in that it glamorized black men in a new way. "His hair and neatly trimmed moustache glisten," wrote Hollie I. West of the Los Angeles Times. "His smile is easy and warm. He is immaculately dressed in a business suit and he has a coat draped over his shoulders." As the actor's manager, Shelly Berger, explained to Mademoiselle' s Bernikow, "In that shot, he went from Billy Dee Williams, character actor, to Billy Dee Williams, matinee idol. All of a sudden he became 'the black Clark Gable.'"

Williams's suave, sexual manner--emblematized by what the Los Angeles Herald Examiner' s Jones called his "devastating smile"--was a novel model of African American male sexuality on the big screen in the era of blaxploitation film tough guys. Thus he was given the "black Clark Gable" label, which likened him to the star of Gone With the Wind but reproached him with the strictures of race-conscious casting. In particular, the actor expressed frustration with the Hollywood taboo against love scenes between black men and white women. "It makes me very sad," he told Bernikow. "Very frustrated. It makes me very angry." In 1976 he appeared opposite Ross again in Mahogany, portraying a grass-roots political activist whose lover is swept up by the fashion world.

Williams returned to the stage to play Martin Luther King, Jr., in the 1976 Broadway production I Have a Dream. The actor revealed to Judy Klemesrud of the New York Times that he had rejected the lead in a film biography of King two years earlier but ultimately accepted the stage role because he felt otherworldly forces demanded it. "I went to an Armenian lady in California who reads tarot cards and coffee grounds. She said, 'I keep seeing this thing you're going to do, a religious leader leading thousands of people.' She told me the same thing when I went back six months later." Berger then brought him the playscript "and said I had to do it, and he's really all big bucks and very cynical. That, to me, was some sort of sign."

Williams's faith in all manner of divination has been a constant; "Actually, I believe in everything," he told Soul, "including astrology and tarot cards. All of it is just another way for people to try and tighten the link to the spirits in our universe. I believe it exists for all people." The spirit of King, he felt, inhabited him onstage. Rather than study the minister-activist's mannerisms, he claimed to Klemesrud, "I would just allow it to happen. I mean, I would immerse myself enough in him so that I just fell into him. I just let it happen naturally." Los Angeles Times reviewer William Glover reported that the actor did "excellently well" in the role.

Williams went on to portray Scott Joplin--the composer-pianist whose work brought ragtime music prominence and who achieved posthumous fame with the hit movie The Sting for his 1902 composition "The Entertainer"--in a biopic for NBC television. "He was really extraordinary, had a lot of depth," the actor said of Joplin in Soul. "He took ragtime out of a rural setting and made it classical."

Williams's popularity by this point had reached a new high; as he told West of the Los Angeles Times, "I see this image-making as an opportunity to communicate with blacks and whites, especially children. The way I looked at Alan Ladd, Humphrey Bogart, or those other great heroes on the screen when I was a kid, I feel that if I'm to be a catalyst, I have to draw the attention of all people." His next high-profile film role came with the 1976 release The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars and Motor Kings, a comedy-drama about veterans of baseball's negro leagues. He described his character, Bingo Long--based on pitching marvel Satchel Paige--to Soul' s Jeanne Allyson Fox as a "ridiculous optimist."

Williams worked steadily in films, taking supporting parts in mainstream fare like the 1981 Sylvester Stallone action movie Nighthawks, but his major role during this period came when he was cast as intergalactic entrepreneur and rogue Lando Calrissian in The Empire Strikes Back, the second--and many argue the finest--of the phenomenally successful Star Wars films. Calrissian plays a crucial role in the development of the action, and though he betrays the heroes early in the film to protect his own interests, he is later instrumental in their triumph.

Williams was particularly pleased with the role because the character had no "race" in the script except human; at last, some purely colorblind casting had come his way. Williams described the character in Ebony: "He's a person of the universe." In a similar vein, he remarked to the Los Angeles Herald Examiner' s Jones, "I was very happy with my character. The only thing that said Lando Calrissian was ethnic was his looks." In 1983 he reprised the role in the final film of the series, Return of the Jedi.

In 1984 Williams joined the cast of the prime-time television soap opera Dynasty, depicting record industry magnate Brady Lloyd. At the same time, he expressed a desire to take on more ambitious characterizations; he told Jones that he would like to play former U.S. President Richard Nixon. He returned to the stage in the 1988 Broadway production of award-winning playwright August Wilson's Fences, though the role in the film version went to James Earl Jones.

During the 1980s Williams met controversy, the result of his television commercials for Colt 45 malt liquor; numerous voices in the black community--from religious leaders to rappers--attacked the aggressive hawking of alcohol to black audiences by African Americans they felt had been co-opted by the liquor industry. Williams responded defensively, dismissing his critics and accusing them of overreacting.

In 1989 Williams appeared in another blockbuster, playing Gotham City district attorney Harvey Dent in Tim Burton's Batman. The actor claimed to have modeled his character on controversial African-American politician Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. "I did Batman because it sounded like a lot of fun," Williams told Barry Koltnow of the Orange County Register, "and they created the character just for me. It's an American institution and was impossible to pass up." In fact, the actor has avoided taking parts for the money alone because, he claims, such a tendency "can destroy your career."

During the late 1980s Williams also began laboring from the early evening until dawn every night to prepare a large number of paintings for an exhibition of his work. "People talk about painting being therapy, and I guess they're right," he noted to Koltnow. "I need to paint. I find it mellows me out. My wife can't even get me into an argument anymore when I'm painting."

His marriage to the wife in question--his third, Teruko--ended a few years later, more than 20 years after it had begun. People reported that the couple "blames that standby, irreconcilable differences, for the split." "I think I'm a good father," Williams had insisted to the Herald Examiner nearly a decade earlier, adding, "As a parent, you have the responsibility to create a foundation for your children so that they can meet all the challenges."

Williams continued to work steadily into the 1990s, appearing in the television films The Jacksons: An American Dream-- in which he portrayed Berry Gordy--as well as Marked for Murder, Percy and Thunder, and other productions. 1993 also marked the opening of an exhibit of his paintings at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York City; many of his pieces salute jazz artists and portray the conflicting currents of their lives. "I think of film when I paint," he told Upscale. "Even the luminosity that I always keep working for is really about film. But my idea is not to paint paintings that will decorate somebody's house. My idea is to paint paintings so that when you walk into a room I'm pulling you in, or that makes you suddenly stop and wonder: 'What is this? There is something groovy, something else going on here.' Also I want to give you what is obvious and what is not obvious to the eye."

Williams, clearly intending to follow the dictates of his own sensibility, has moved from character actor to glamorous leading man and back again, expressing no interest in being pigeonholed. And ultimately, as he revealed to Soul, his endeavors have become linked to the spiritual: "I am an artist no matter what I do," he proclaimed. "I live for creativity. I think everyone should. It is the antithesis of being destructive. I want to always be able to see--to walk into any situation and see the people and what is going on."

Further Reading

Sources

  • Ebony, January 1981, pp. 31-39.
  • Los Angeles Herald Examiner, November 12, 1984, pp. C1, C6.
  • Los Angeles Times, January 25, 1976, Calendar, p. 31; September 24, 1976, section IV, p. 20.
  • Mademoiselle, June 1983, pp. 33-6.
  • New York Times, September 19, 1976.
  • Orange County Register, June 20, 1989, pp. F1, F6.
  • Parade, January 15, 1989, pp. 5-7.
  • People, July 5, 1993.
  • Soul, July 19, 1976, pp. 2-4.
  • Upscale, May 1994.

— Simon Glickman

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Actor: Billy Dee Williams
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  • Born: Apr 06, 1937 in New York City, New York
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '70s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Action
  • Career Highlights: The Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi, Lady Sings the Blues
  • First Major Screen Credit: Brian's Song (1970)

Biography

One of the most handsome leading men in Hollywood with his soulful brown eyes, neat, thick moustache, great physique, and natural poise, Billy Dee Williams was a major star during the 1970s, but his acting career dates back to 1947 when he debuted on the Broadway stage opposite German actress Lotte Lenya in the play The Firebrand of Florence. It was Williams' mother, an elevator operator at the Lyceum Theater where the play was produced, who brought him before the producers after she heard that they needed a child. As a teen, Williams studied drama at the prestigious High School of Music and Art in New York; he also studied at the National Academy of Fine Arts and then at the Harlem Actors Workshop where he was tutored by Sidney Poitier. As an adult, he returned to Broadway, but did not make his feature film debut until he landed a substantial supporting role in The Last Angry Man (1959). It would be a decade before Williams starred in another film. He made a favorable impression playing Gayle Sayers in the touching made-for-TV movie Brian's Song, but did not become a movie star until he appeared opposite Diana Ross in Lady Sings the Blues (1972). In 1975, the pair reteamed for the highly successful melodrama Mahogany (1975). At his popularity's peak, Williams was referred to as "the black Gable." Though he went on to star in other pictures throughout the decade, Williams' star was beginning to fade by 1980 until he played a dashing role in George Lucas' Star Wars sequel The Empire Strikes Back and its sequel, Return of the Jedi (1983). He was also particularly memorable as the district attorney in Tim Burton's Batman (1989). Through the '90s, Williams' career slowed, but for a few television movies in 1993, his appearances became sporadic. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Filmography: Billy Dee Williams
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Wikipedia: Billy Dee Williams
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Billy Dee Williams

Williams at Comic-Con 2005
Born William December Williams, Jr.
April 6, 1937 (1937-04-06) (age 72)
New York City, New York, United States
Occupation Actor, artist, writer
Years active 1959 - present

Billy Dee Williams (born William December Williams, Jr. on April 6 1937 IN New York, United States) is an American actor, artist, singer and writer, best known for his role as Lando Calrissian in the Star Wars films as well as pitchman for Colt 45 malt liquor.

Contents

Early life

Williams was born in New York City, the son of Loretta, a West Indian-born elevator operator from Montserrat, and William December Williams, Sr. a Texas-born janitor.[1][2] He has a twin sister, Loretta, and grew up in Harlem, where he was raised by his maternal grandmother while his parents worked at several jobs. Williams graduated from Manhattan's School of Performing Arts where he was a classmate of Diahann Carroll, who coincidentally played the wife of his character Brady Lloyd on the 1980s prime-time soap Dynasty.

Career

Film

He made his film debut in 1959 in The Last Angry Man starring Paul Muni, in which he portrayed a juvenile delinquent. His first big break was in the acclaimed television movie, Brian's Song in which he played Gale Sayers. In 1972 he played Billie Holliday's husband Louis McKay in Motown Productions' Holiday biopic Lady Sings the Blues. Diana Ross starred in Lady Sings the Blues opposite Williams; Motown paired the two of them again three years later in Mahogany.

His most famous role is Lando Calrissian, which he played in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back and Star Wars Episode VI: Return of the Jedi. He later reprised this role, when he lent his voice for the character in the 2002 video game Star Wars Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast, as well as the audio dramatization of Dark Empire and the National Public Radio adaptation of Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back. Williams had originally auditioned for the role of Han Solo during the casting of Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope.

Williams appeared in numerous other films, most recently lending his voice to Oedipus (2004). One of his most notable roles was in 1989's Batman as district attorney Harvey Dent.[3] Williams originally took the role believing that it would land him in a sequel playing the supervillain Two-Face and arranged a pay or play contract in preparation for the role. However, the studio decided to pay the penalty fee instead when the time came for the third installment, Batman Forever, in order to cast Tommy Lee Jones for the role.

Television

Williams' television work included a recurring guest-starring role on the short-lived show Gideon's Crossing. He has had a brief cameo in the hit TV show Scrubs Season 5, where he plays the godfather of Julie (Mandy Moore). J.D.'s best friend Turk hugs him calling him "Lando" even though he wants to be called Billy D. He is also well-known for his appearance in advertisements for Colt 45, a brand of malt liquor, for which he received much criticism. Williams responded indifferently to the criticism of his appearances in the liquor commercials. When questioned about his appearances he was quoted as saying, "I drink, you drink. Hell, if marijuana was legal, I'd appear in a commercial for it."[citation needed]

Williams was paired with actress Marla Gibbs on three different TV shows: The Jeffersons (Gibbs' character, Florence, had a crush on Williams and challenged him on everything because she thought he was an impostor); 227 (her character, Mary, pretending to be royalty, met Williams at a banquet); and The Hughleys (both Gibbs and Williams portrayed Darryl's parents). (In one memorable scene on The Jeffersons, Williams, waiting for Florence to hand over his driver's license to him, repeats the line "Do you want my arm to fall off?" Florence, now convinced that he is Williams, yells "that's the line you said to Diana Ross in Lady Sings the Blues! He then replies "I got another one right!")

Williams made a special guest appearance on the hit sketch comedy show, In Living Color in 1990. He portrayed Pastor Dan in an episode of That '70s Show. In this episode entitled "Baby Don't You Do It" (2004) his character is obsessed with Star Wars, and uses this to help counsel Eric Forman and Donna Pinciotti about their premarital relationship.

Williams made a cameo appearance as himself on the TV series Lost in the episode "Exposé". He also appears regularly on short clips on the Jimmy Kimmel Live as a semi-parody of himself. One of his more recent appearances was in the fourth season of Mind of Mencia.

He played Toussaint Dubois for General Hospital: Night Shift in 2007 and 2008. Williams reprised his role as Toussaint on General Hospital itself beginning in June 2009.

Music

In 1961, Williams recorded a jazz LP produced by Prestige Records entitled Let's Misbehave on which he sang several swing standards. The album is currently out of print.

Video games

Williams voiced Lando Calrissian in the video game Star Wars Jedi Knight II: Jedi Outcast. He has recently played a live action character, GDI Director Redmond Boyle, in the game Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars, making him the second former Star Wars actor to appear in a Command and Conquer game, with the first being James Earl Jones as GDI General James Solomon in Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun.

Internet

In 2008, Williams reprised his role as Lando Calrissian to appear in a video on FunnyOrDie.com in a mock political ad defending himself for leader of the Star Wars galaxy against vicious attack ads from Emperor Palpatine. The video is titled "Vote for Lando Calrissian! w/ BILLY DEE WILLIAMS"[4]

Art

Even before he began acting, Williams attended the National Academy of Fine Arts and Design in New York. In the late 1980s, he resumed painting. Some of his work can be seen at his online gallery BDW World Art. He has had solo exhibitions in various galleries around the U.S., and his work hangs in the National Portrait Gallery, The Smithsonian Institution, and The Schomburg Museum. The covers of the Thelonious Monk Competition programs since 1990 are by him.

Personal life

Williams has been married three times, first to Audrey Sellers, with whom he had a son Corey (b. 1960). They were divorced some years later, after which he apparently became quite depressed. ".... there was a period when I was very despondent, broke, depressed, my first marriage was on the rocks."[5] Williams was briefly married to actress Marlene Clark in the late 1960s, divorced in 1971. He married Teruko Nakagami on December 27, 1972. She brought a daughter, Miyako (b. 1962), from her previous marriage to musician Wayne Shorter.) They have a daughter Hanako (b. 1973). They filed for divorce in 1993,[6] but were reported to have reconciled in 1997.[7][8]

Filmography

Films

Short subjects
  • Very Heavy Love (2001)
  • Oedipus (2004) (voice)

Television work

Recorded musical work

Video game work

Books

Further reading

  • Nishikawa, Kinohi. "Billy Dee Williams." The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Literature. Ed. Hans Ostrom and J. David Macey, Jr. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2005. 1742-43.

References

External links

Preceded by
None
Actors to portray Harvey Dent/Two-Face
1989-1995
Succeeded by
Tommy Lee Jones

 
 

 

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Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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