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Carl Lumbly

 
Actor: Carl Lumbly
 
  • Born: in Jamaica
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '80s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Action
  • Career Highlights: To Sleep with Anger, Oprah Winfrey Presents: The Wedding, Everybody's All-American
  • First Major Screen Credit: Taxi: Fantasy Borough, Part 1 (1980)

Biography

Widely recognized by television viewers for his role as Agent Marcus Dixon on the popular sci-fi action television series Alias, actor Carl Lumbly has been appearing on both the big and small screens since the late '70s. With early appearances on Cagney and Lacey and L.A. Law, as well as roles in such high-profile releases as Pacific Heights (1990) and How Stella Got her Groove Back (1998), chances are you'd recognize Lumbly's face even if his name doesn't immediately ring a bell. A native of Jamaica who attended Minnesota's Macalester College, his career in journalism eventually led to acting when he was assigned to write a story about a local workshop theater. Subsequently immersing himself in the improvisational company for the next two years, it wasn't long before Lumbly made his film debut in Escape From Alcatraz (1979). Gaining an impressive list of small-screen credits with appearances in such popular sitcoms as The Jeffersons and Taxi, the 1980s proved both busy and fruitful as offers continued to roll in. Cast in the lead of the series M.A.N.T.I.S. in 1994, Lumbly essayed the role of a paralyzed scientist who dons a specially designed exoskeleton in the name of fighting crime. Though the show had a small devoted fan base, it was soon taken off the air, and Lumbly rounded out the decade with roles in such made-for-television films as Nightjohn (1996), Buffalo Soldiers (1997), and Border Line (1999). After returning to series work in Alias, Lumbly provided voice work for the animated television series the Justice League, and took the lead in longtime friend Danny Glover's family-friendly drama Just a Dream. The following year found the popular Lumbly remaining family-friendly with a featured role in the made-for-television remake Sounder. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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Black Biography: Carl Lumbly
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actor

Personal Information

Born on August 14, 1952, in Minneapolis, MN, to Jamaican immigrant parents; married Vonnetta McGee (an actor); children: Brandon
Education: Macalester College, BA, English, 1973.

Career

3M Corporation, Minneapolis, public relations writer, mid-1970s; Associated Press, freelance writer, mid-1970s; Brave New Workshop theater company, Minneapolis, member, mid-1970s; actor, mid-1970s-

Life's Work

In the role of Agent Dixon on the hit television program Alias in the early 2000s, Carl Lumbly conveyed a streak of edgy intensity lurking beneath the veneer of a traditional supporting actor's sidekick part. That intensity has run through much of Lumbly's acting work and has its roots in the dynamics of the actor's early life. Praised by critics, Lumbly built a successful acting career in spite of his reluctance to accept many of the roles that fell to African-American actors.

Lumbly was born to Jamaican immigrant parents in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on August 14, 1952. His family had recently come to chilly Minnesota after meeting a local radio host, Cedric Adams, while he was vacationing in Jamaica. Lumbly's father Carrol got a job as a welder but never felt at ease in the United States, and his mother mostly stayed at home. Lumbly's parents raised their children with an appreciation of the Jamaican culture. About his family's home Lumbly recalled to the Minneapolis Star Tribune that "Once you stepped in the door, you were in Jamaica."

Out of sight of his father, who brooked no disrespect, Lumbly would amuse his sister Amy (a future television news reporter) by imitating their father's finicky way of aligning his tableware. He showed an interest in theater while he was attending South High School in Minneapolis, but most of his free time was taken up by playing basketball and trombone--sometimes in the course of the same game. He would change clothes during the coach's halftime pep talk and come out onto the court with his trombone for the band's halftime show. "I like to work real hard," Lumbly told the Star Tribune.

Winning admission to Minnesota's competitive Macalester College, Lumbly majored in English and took roles in two student theater productions. Urged to pursue a professional career by his father, he thought about attending law or medical school, and he had no thoughts of trying to act professionally. After graduating, Lumbly accepted a public relations job at the 3M corporation and also did some freelance newspaper writing on the side. One evening in the mid-1970s, he visited an innovative new theater company called Brave New Workshop to observe its open auditions, hoping to write an article about them but not planning to audition himself.

Through a mixup that began when Lumbly stood in the wrong line of people, he ended up auditioning. Three weeks later, the Workshop directors asked Lumbly to join the company. He did and soon found himself enjoying acting quite a bit. He appeared in several revues, signed on with several other theater companies, and even wrote a comic play of his own, Badd High. The high points of his experiences were some episodes of improvisational theater he performed at Brave New Workshop. "I lived with many, many strictures in my life, and adhered to lots of things that other people believed I should adhere to," Lumbly told the Star Tribune. In an improv skit, on the other hand, he found that anything goes. "Whenever I could, I would try to see just how strange and how weird and how far away from myself I could be." But when he veered into questionable humor, he worried about how his father would react if he saw him.

Despite his stage appearances, Lumbly didn not yet consider himself an actor. Partly to get away from Minnesota's cold winters, he moved with a girlfriend to San Francisco in 1977 and decided to try to make a living as an Associated Press writer. But he saw a classified ad in a newspaper seeking two black actors for parts in a pair of short plays by South African writer Athol Fugard. After an audition with director Robert Woodruff, Lumbly was hired for one of the parts, and future superstar Danny Glover got the other. That break led to other stage parts. Especially active in live theater during the 1980s, Lumbly finally won his ill father's approval of his new career after appearing in a 1983 Minneapolis production of the musical The Gospel at Colonus. He also appeared at such prestigious venues as the New York Shakespeare Festival, where he played the role of Oberon in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream in 1988.

Soon after moving to California, Lumbly began to attract television and movie parts as well, beginning with a bit part in the film Escape from Alcatraz in 1979. What made him a familiar face to the public at large was his ongoing role as Sgt. Marcus Petrie in the hit television series Cagney & Lacey, which he joined beginning with the pilot episode in 1982. He also appeared in several films with specifically African-American themes; in the 1991 Public Broadcasting System film Brother Future, he played slave rebel Denmark Vesey.

That was the first of several roles in which Lumbly played figures from the slavery era; he would later appear in a film devoted to Nat Turner, and his first television film starring role came in Nightjohn, which featured him as a slave who teaches others to read. Lumbly generally declined roles that he felt relegated African-American actors to stereotypical urban action tales, and he has been a consistent voice speaking out in favor of increased opportunities for black performers. When he did take an action role, it was an unusual one: he starred in the 1994 Fox network series M.A.N.T.I.S. as the disabled Dr. Miles Hawkins, who takes on the powers of a giant insect. Featuring television's first black superhero, the series gained a cult following but lasted only one season.

Lumbly won an NAACP Image Award nomination for his performance in the 1997 television film Buffalo Soldiers, and he kept his profile high with appearances in the hit film How Stella Got Her Groove Back and with guest slots on the television series The X-Files and The West Wing. In 2001 he was cast opposite actress Jennifer Garner in the ABC network's over-the-top spy series Alias; Lumbly and Garner played espionage partners enmeshed in a giant web of deception that led them to keep secrets from their loved ones and from each other. Alias creator J.J. Abrams cast Lumbly in the role of Agent Marcus Dixon because he felt Lumbly would bring a sense of gravity to stories that otherwise risked running into campy territory.

Married to actress Vonnetta McGee, Lumbly has one son, Brandon. He continues to enjoy writing in his spare time, and he stays in shape as a marathon runner. In 2003 he starred in a made-for-TV remake of the classic film Sounder, and he looked to a future in which he challenged himself with a wider range of roles in theatrical feature films. He didn't rule out playing the evil characters he had long avoided, but, he told the Star Tribune, he had always followed an overriding set of principles. "A lot of what has guided me in the past is the history of black men in this industry and the history of black men in this country. There's also the personal history with my father."

Works

Selected works

    Films
    • Escape from Alcatraz, 1979.
    • Hardcore, 1979.
    • Lifepod (also known as Life Pod), 1980.
    • Caveman, 1981.
    • The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai: Across the Eighth Dimension (also known as Buckaroo Banzai), 1984.
    • The Bedroom Window, 1987.
    • Judgment in Berlin (also known as Escape to Freedom), 1988.
    • Everybody's All-American (also known as When I Fall in Love), 1988.
    • To Sleep with Anger, 1990.
    • Pacific Heights, 1990.
    • South Central, 1992.
    • How Stella Got Her Groove Back, 1998.
    Plays
    • Meetings, 1981.
    • Nevis Mountain Dew, 1981.
    • The Tempest, 1981.
    • The Gospel at Colonus, 1983.
    • Eyes of the American, 1986.
    • A Midsummer Night's Dream, 1988.
    • Miss Evers' Boys, 1989-90.
    Television
    • Undercover with the KKK (also known as The Freedom Riders and My Undercover Years with the KKK; television movie), 1979.
    • Conspiracy: The Trial of the Chicago Eight (television movie), 1987.
    • Cagney and Lacey (series), 1982-88.
    • LA Law (series), 1989-90.
    • Brother Future (television movie), 1991.
    • Eyes of a Witness (also known as Circumstantial Evidence; television movie), 1991.
    • Back to the Streets of San Francisco (television movie), 1992.
    • Going to Extremes (series), 1992-93.
    • M.A.N.T.I.S. (series), 1994.
    • On Promised Land (also known as My Precious T-Top; television movie), 1994.
    • EZ Streets (series), 1996.
    • Nightjohn (television movie), 1996.
    • The Ditchdigger's Daughters (television movie), 1997.
    • Buffalo Soldiers (television movie), 1997.
    • Border Line (television movie), 1999.
    • Alias (series), 2001-.
    • Nat Turner: A Troublesome Property (television movie), 2003.
    • Sounder (television movie), 2003.

    Further Reading

    Books

    • Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television, volume 27, Gale, 2000.
    Periodicals
    • Rocky Mountain News (Denver, CO), September 2, 1994, p. D36.
    • San Francisco Chronicle, February 16, 1997, p. 33.
    • Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN), January 23, 1994, p. F1; January 18, 2003, p. E1.
    • Times Picayune (New Orleans, LA), September 2, 1994, p. E1.
    • Variety, March 17, 2003, p. 35.
    On-line
    • "Alias: The TV Show," ABC Television, www.alias-tv.com/carl.html (July 30, 2004).

    — James M. Manheim

     
    Wikipedia: Carl Lumbly
    Top
    Carl Lumbly
    Born August 14, 1951 (1951-08-14) (age 57)
    Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
    Spouse(s) Vonetta McGee
    (1987 — present)

    Carl Winston Lumbly (born August 14, 1951)[1] is an American film, stage, and television actor. He's most known for the role of Marcus Dixon in the successful television drama Alias.

    Contents

    Biography

    Early life

    Born to Jamaican immigrants in Minneapolis, Minnesota, Lumbly graduated from South High School there and Macalester College in nearby St. Paul.

    Acting career

    At one time he was a journalist in Minnesota, when he got an acting job while on assignment for a story about a workshop theatre and stayed with the improvisational company for two years (along with then-unknown Danny Glover).

    His first major role was Detective Marcus Petrie on the television series Cagney and Lacey (1982 – 1988). In 1987, he garned positive reviews for his portrayal of Black Panther Party co-founder Bobby Seale in the HBO television movie Conspiracy: The Trial of the Chicago 8.

    From 1994-1995, Lumbly starred as the main character in the short-lived sci-fi series M.A.N.T.I.S.. Perhaps his most visible role was as Marcus Dixon in the American television series Alias (2001 – 2006). Other prominent roles include providing the voice the for Martian Manhunter on Justice League and Justice League Unlimited, and a recurring role on L.A. Law as a college professor unjustly accused of first-degree murder. He also appeared as the voice of the Mayor of Metropolis on Superman the Animated Series episode "Speed Demons" in 1997.

    In 2000, Lumbly portrayed activist and Congressman Ron Dellums in the Disney's Channel's original movie, The Color of Friendship. Although the movie was focused on Dellums's daughter's friendship with a white South African girl, the film also discussed Dellums's role in ending apartheid in South Africa.

    Lumbly most recently appeared as Lt. Daniel "Bulldog" Novacek in the television series Battlestar Galactica. Lumbly also plays a role in the cinematic of video game Command and Conquer 3 's expansion pack Kane's Wrath.

    Works

    Film

    Television

    Video Games

    References

    1. ^ According to the State of Minnesota. Minnesota Birth Index, 1935-2002. At Ancestry.com

    External links


     
     

     

    Copyrights:

    Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Carl Lumbly" Read more

     

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