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Wesley Snipes

 
Who2 Biography: Wesley Snipes, Actor
 
Wesley Snipes
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  • Born: 31 July 1962
  • Birthplace: Orlando, Florida
  • Best Known As: Star of the Blade vampire movies

Wesley Snipes is best known as the star of the vampire revenge movie Blade (1998) and its sequels Blade II (2002) and Blade Trinity (2004). Snipes became a prominent leading man in the early 1990s, after he broke out in the films Mo' Better Blues (1990, directed by Spike Lee), New Jack City (1991) and Jungle Fever (1991, also directed by Lee). In the next few years he played both heroes and villains in a number of respectable action pictures, including the airline thriller Passenger 57 (1992), Demolition Man (1993, as the quick-frozen tormentor of Sylvester Stallone), Boiling Point (1993, co-starring Viggo Mortensen) and Drop Zone (1994, with Gary Busey). Snipes also took comic roles in White Men Can't Jump (1992) and To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar (1995), but his most successful turn has been as the half-man, half-vampire Blade, a vampire hunter inspired by the Marvel comics character of the same name. Snipes was arrested in December of 2006 and accused of tax fraud by the United States Internal Revenue Service. He was convicted in 2008 of failing to file tax returns during the years 1999-2004, and sentenced to three years in jail.

Snipes had a small role as a bad guy in the Michael Jackson video for the song "Bad" (1987, directed by Martin Scorsese).

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Actor: Wesley Snipes
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  • Born: Jul 31, 1962 in Orlando, Florida
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Action, Drama
  • Career Highlights: White Men Can't Jump, The Waterdance, Jungle Fever
  • First Major Screen Credit: Streets of Gold (1986)

Biography

With sleek, well-muscled good looks that easily lend themselves to romantic leading roles or parts that call for running, jumping, and handling firearms, Wesley Snipes became one of the most popular Hollywood stars of the 1990s. First coming to prominence with roles in Spike Lee's Mo' Better Blues and Jungle Fever, Snipes went on to prove himself as an actor who could appeal to audiences as a man that women want and men want to be.

Born in Orlando, FL, on July 31, 1962, Snipes grew up in the Bronx. He developed an early interest in acting and attended Manhattan's High School for the Performing Arts. His mother moved him back to Florida before he could graduate, but after finishing up high school in Florida, Snipes attended the State University of New York-Purchase and began pursuing an acting career. It was while performing in a competition that he was discovered by an agent, and a short time later he made his film debut in the Goldie Hawn vehicle Wildcats (1986). Although he appeared in a few more films during the 1980s, it was Snipes' turn as a street tough who menaces Michael Jackson in the Martin Scorsese-directed video for "Bad" that caught the eye of director Lee. He was so impressed with the actor's performance that he cast him in his 1990 Mo' Better Blues as a flamboyant saxophonist opposite Denzel Washington. That role, coupled with the exposure that Snipes had received for his performance as a talented but undisciplined baseball player in the previous year's Major League, succeeded in giving the actor a tentative plot on the Hollywood map. With his starring role in Lee's 1991 Jungle Fever, Snipes won critical praise and increased his audience exposure, and his career duly took off.

That same year, Snipes further demonstrated his flexibility with disparate roles in New Jack City, in which he played a volatile drug lord, and The Waterdance, in which he starred as a former wild man repenting for his ways in a hospital's paraplegic ward. Both performances earned strong reviews, and the following year Snipes found himself as the lead in his first big-budget action flick, Passenger 57. The film, which featured the actor as an ex-cop with an attitude who takes on an airplane hijacker, proved to be a hit. Snipes' other film that year, the comedy White Men Can't Jump, was also successful, allowing the actor to enter the arena of full-fledged movie star.

After a few more action stints in such films as Rising Sun (1993), which featured him opposite Sean Connery, Snipes went in a different direction with an uncredited role in Waiting to Exhale (1995). The same year he completely bucked his macho, action-figure persona with his portrayal of a flamboyant drag queen in To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar. Snipes continued to focus on less testosterone-saturated projects after a turn as a baseball player in The Fan (1996), starring as an adulterous director in Mike Figgis' One Night Stand (1997) -- for which he won a Best Actor award at the Venice Film Festival -- and as Alfre Woodard's handsome cousin in Down in the Delta in 1998. That same year, Snipes returned to the action genre, playing a pumped-up vampire slayer in Blade and a wrongfully accused man on the run from the law in the sequel to The Fugitive, U.S. Marshals. The former would prove to be a massive cult hit and one of his biggest box-office successes to date. And while the new millenium would see most of Snipes' films relegated to straight-to-video releases, a pair of Blade sequels in 2002 and 2004 helped the actor remain a presence at the multiplexes. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
 
Black Biography: Wesley Snipes
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actor

Personal Information

Born on July 31, 1962, in Orlando, FL; son of an aircraft engineer and a teacher's aide; married, 1985 (divorced, 1990); children: Jelani (son).
Education: State University of New York at Purchase, B.A., 1984.

Career

Actor in motion pictures, stage plays, and on television, 1985--. Selected stage appearances include The Me Nobody Knows, The Boys of Winter, Death and the King's Horsemen, and Execution of Justice. Also appeared in HBO's Vietnam Story, 1987, America's Dream, 1996, and Michael Jackson's music video Bad, 1987. Film appearances include roles in Wildcats, 1985, Streets of Gold, 1986, Major League, 1989, King of New York, 1990, Mo' Better Blues, 1990, New Jack City, 1991, Jungle Fever, 1991, White Men Can't Jump, 1992, The Waterdance, 1992, Passenger 57, 1992, Boiling Point, 1993, Demolition Man, 1993, Rising Sun, 1993, Drop Zone, 1994, Sugar Hill, 1994, To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar, 1995, Waiting to Exhale, 1995, The Fan, 1996, Murder at 1600, 1997, One Night Stand, 1997, U.S. Marshals, 1998, Down in the Delta, 1998, Blade, 1998.

Life's Work

Before reaching the age of 30, actor Wesley Snipes was already recognized as an important new figure in his field. His picture graced the cover of Newsweek and Jet magazines, and New Yorker magazine critic Pauline Kael dubbed him one of the most impressive members of a new generation of American actors. Snipes came to be considered one of the chief players in the film industry and an enduring, mesmerizing talent.

Snipes was born on July 31, 1962, in Orlando, Florida. His father, an aircraft engineer, and his mother, Marian, then a teacher's aide, divorced a year after his birth. His mother then moved him and two of his seven siblings to the South Bronx section of New York, where he spent his childhood honing negotiating skills. Snipes stood 5 feet 5 inches tall when in high school--he eventually grew 6 more inches--and substituted bravado, boldness, and charm for height at that time, which in turn served as a solid foundation for his adult life.

Snipes's aunt Della Saunders entered him in talent shows when he was a child. One of those led to a minor role in the off-Broadway play The Me Nobody Knows when Snipes was 12 years old. Frequent auditions and basketball practice kept him busy in high school, and his competitive nature helped ensure that he would fare well academically. His keen interest in dance led him to enroll in New York's High School of the Performing Arts, known for its strong dance department. Snipes was content there, so two years later, when his mother decided to move the family back to Orlando, the teenager complained bitterly. He had become a regular at the local pool hall and was so good at the game that he made money hustling pool. His mother decided it was time for a change of atmosphere.

Seeds of Raw Talent

After attending a multiethnic elementary school in the South Bronx, and then the High School of the Performing Arts, Snipes suddenly found himself in a predominantly African American public school in Orlando, and his fast-paced style was at odds with Southern sensibilities. In an interview with Washington Post contributor Jay Mathews, Snipes described how he felt when he first went to Orlando: ''They're just moseying along, like lemonade on the porch on a Sunday afternoon, and you're like, yo, I can't stand this. Let me outta here."

The drama department of Jones High School in Orlando soon took his mind off of what he had left behind when they started casting for Damn Yankees. Snipes was given a warm reception in the theater department and wasn't modest when it came to letting it be known that he had attended the High School of the Performing Arts. He earned spending money in high school by joining a city-sponsored drama troupe called Struttin' Street Stuff and performed puppet shows in parks and schools for up to $70 a week. Around the same time, he also won an award for his one-man show playing Puck, a character from William Shakespeare's comedy A Midsummer Night's Dream, and had a successful run playing Felix Ungar in The Odd Couple.

Snipes told Stephen Holden of the New York Times: ''Moving to Florida was the best thing that could have happened to me. A lot of the cats I grew up with in the South Bronx found themselves in sticky situations." Karen Rugerio, Snipes's drama teacher at Jones High, told the Washington Post: ''He was always very focused. If you criticize the work of someone at that age, they often get upset, but Wes would always listen very carefully, wanting to learn how he could do it better."

Shaped by Experiences in College

When it came time for college, Snipes auditioned for the State University of New York at Purchase's esteemed theater arts program and was readily accepted, receiving a Victor Borge scholarship. As Snipes explained to Larry Rohter of the New York Times, he fell into acting through the urging of others who saw that he was a natural. ''I really wanted to be a singer and dancer," he said, ''and I still have a latent passion for that. When I see Alvin Ailey or Chuck Davis or Forces of Nature, I'm sitting there saying 'I could have been up there."'

Snipes was one of only four African American students in the theater arts department at SUNY Purchase, and he told Ebony magazine that it was a disconcerting experience: ''I felt like mold on white bread.... What saved me was being exposed to Malcolm X." The emphasis on African American pride found in the writings of Malcolm X helped Snipes weather a confusing period in his life: an African American man coming of age while surrounded by whites. He became a Muslim for a short time, starting in the second semester of his freshman year, then abandoned the faith three years after he graduated. He revealed to Randolph: ''A brother of mine used to say 'When you're drowning, grab onto a log to keep afloat. But don't hold on to the log when the boat comes by. Get on the boat and bring your butt on back home.' So Islam for me was the log to make me more conscious of what African people have accomplished, of my self-worth, to give me some self-dignity."

While in college, Snipes auditioned for Harry Belafonte's movie about break-dancers called Beat Street and realized that in addition to applying standard acting techniques, he also had to draw more from his own life-experience on the street. He didn't land a part in the movie, but it was a learning experience for him. Although Snipes was never given the role of leading male in any of the university productions--in spite of his obvious talents and experience--after he left college to pursue professional work, he quickly became a leading man who was very much in demand. David Garfield, an acting teacher at SUNY Purchase, told the Los Angeles Times that Snipes was ''obviously gifted. He was extremely funny, he could do straight drama, he could sing and he would stop shows with the dance numbers he had choreographed. He also exhibited a strong black consciousness even then."

Steady Climb to Fame

Snipes met his wife while a senior in college, and they married a year after he graduated in 1984. He took a job installing telephones in New York, and that same year a casting director who had spotted him at a university drama convention contacted him for Goldie Hawn's football parody Wildcats after the first choice actor didn't work out. Then, along with Matt Dillon and Andrew McCarthy, Snipes procured a leading role in John Pielmeier's off-Broadway play The Boys Of Winter, about the ravaging effects of the Vietnam War on U.S. soldiers, and followed with a role in the Lincoln Center production of Wole Soyinka's Death and the King's Horsemen. After this, true to his flexible nature, he put on spike heels to portray drag queen Sister Boom-Boom in Emily Mann's Broadway play Execution of Justice. Mann told the Los Angeles Times: ''I remember when he auditioned. I had never seen a man put on high heels and walk that way and all of us said 'That guy is going to be a star.'"

Because Snipes pursued an interest in martial arts, and because he has the natural grace and balance of a dancer, he was well-cast as an athlete. In 1986, Snipes portrayed a boxer in the film Streets of Gold. Then he experienced a short lull in his career, so he turned to other pursuits for his livelihood. Therapeutic massage and parking cars were two of the things Snipes tried in 1987 before landing a role in HBO's Vietnam Story. He eventually won the cable industry's ACE Award for best actor for his work in Vietnam Story.

In 1987, Snipes also appeared in Michael Jackson's Bad video, and this cameo role changed the course of his fate. Snipes portrayed a gang leader who shoved Michael Jackson up against a wall, and in doing so, caught the attention of director Spike Lee and New Jack City co-screenwriter Barry Michael Cooper. Lee commented to Premier magazine's Ralph Rugoff that Snipes ''was so real, Michael Jackson must've been scared to death."

Vietnam Story was followed by a part in the 1989 baseball comedy Major League--he turned down a smaller part in Lee's Do the Right Thing for this role--and later a minor role in the drug warfare film King of New York. Around the same time, Snipes and his wife had a son named Jelani. The couple divorced in 1990. That same year, Snipes portrayed a jazz saxophonist named Shadow Henderson in Lee's Mo' Better Blues, holding his own opposite Academy Award winner Denzel Washington. Snipes told Randolph: ''I just wanted to go in, do a good job, and not let Denzel blow me off the screen." In preparation for his role as a saxophonist, Snipes watched tapes of John Coltrane and other jazz legends and visited a variety of the jazz clubs in New York City. A proficient mimic, Snipes memorized scales and fingering for all of the music played in the film.

An Established Leading Man

The role of Harlem drug baron Nino Brown in the 1991 film, New Jack City, was also written with Snipes in mind after his appearance in the video Bad. Directed by Mario Van Peebles, New Jack City grossed $22.3 million at the box office within its first three weeks--a tribute to the powerful screen presence of Snipes. New Jack City was designed to be an anti-drug and anti-violence gangster film, but a spate of shootings and violence erupted briefly at some theaters across the country after it opened. Some of the eruptions were due to the fact that few theaters were showing the film at first, and those that were sold out quickly, leaving dozens of frustrated people--usually teenagers--outside of the theater without tickets. Rohter noted: ''Indeed, Mr. Snipes now finds himself in the peculiar position of fending off arguments that his portrayal (of drug lord Nino Brown) may have been too effective." Commenting in the Los Angeles Times about the theaters where outbreaks occurred, Snipes asserted: ''They oversold the showings by 1,500 tickets and the theater owners didn't give their money back. The same thing would happen with a Menudo concert, or the Rolling Stones."

Landed Leading Roles

Because of Snipes's outstanding performance as Shadow in Mo' Better Blues, Lee decided to cast him as Flipper Purify in Jungle Fever, a controversial film about interracial romance, and wrote the part with Snipes in mind. Snipes told the New York Times that Lee had said to him on the last day of shooting Mo' Better Blues: ''Be ready for the next one, because I got something great for you." In Jungle Fever, released in June of 1991, Snipes portrayed a married architect having an affair with his white secretary-an affair that ended due to economic and cultural differences between the lovers and their conflicted families. The film was a vehicle for Lee's views on interracial relationships, and Snipes told Hilary De Vries of the Los Angeles Times: ''I don't know if the film is an argument for racial purity. I think it's about how color-conscious this society really is."

Snipes followed Jungle Fever with a leading role in Ron Shelton's 1992 release White Men Can't Jump, a movie about street basketball featuring Snipes and Cheers actor Woody Harrelson as urban hoop hustlers. The on-screen chemistry between the two stars helped make White Men Can't Jump one of the season's top moneymakers, and through his performance, Snipes solidified his place in American film. As he pointed out in Entertainment Weekly, ''Rarely have you seen a young black male in this type of powerful position, who can basically make or break a project."

Following White Men Can't Jump, Snipes began work on Neil Jamenez's The Waterdance, which won several awards at the 1992 Sundance Film Festival. In the film, he portrayed one of a group of hospitalized paraplegics and quadriplegics. To research his role, Snipes spoke with patients at rehabilitation centers to understand their physical limitations and to glean emotional insight as well.

In mid-1992, Snipes appeared in the action/adventure film Passenger 57. The film featured Snipes as a security agent and martial arts expert named John Cutter. Cutter is a passenger on a plane that is hijacked by terrorists, and he uses his skills and intelligence to save his fellow passengers. Stephen Holden of the New York Times critiqued Snipes's performance: "As an action hero, Mr. Snipes belongs to the school that plays it cool and tongue-in-cheek. Consistently underplaying his part, he strolls through the role with a glint in his eye that seems to acknowledge that the movie is really a live-action cartoon."

The following year, Snipes starred in Boiling Point as a U.S. marshal who tracks down a sociopathic con artist. He also starred opposite Sean Connery in a film adaptation of Michael Crichton's novel, Rising Sun. Snipes and Connery play two detectives who are called upon to investigate the murder of a prostitute during the opening of a new skyscraper in Los Angeles. Although reviews of the film were mixed, many critics lauded Snipes's performance. "Snipes, as the bewildered-innocent half of the detective team..., has the trickier role and brings it off flawlessly: his confusion is necessarily comic, but he never seems a buffoon, " remarked Terrence Rafferty of the New Yorker. Also in 1993, Snipes teamed with Sylvester Stallone in Demolition Man. As Simon Phoenix, Snipes portrayed a criminal who escapes from prison after being cryogenically frozen for 36 years. In order to recapture Phoenix the authorities turn to John Spartan, a police sergeant who was also cryogenically frozen. The film centers around the battles between Phoenix and Spartan, who is played by Stallone, in the fictional city of San Angeles. Again, Snipes received rave reviews for his performance. John Anderson of New York Newsday remarked: "Snipes, the villain you can't quite bring yourself to hate, turns out to be the kind of natural comedian Stallone will never be."

In 1994 Snipes landed the role of Roemello Skuggs, a drug dealer who seeks an escape from his violent world, in the film Sugar Hill. That same year he starred as Pete Nessip in Drop Zone, a film about a U.S. marshal who enters the world of professional skydiving to destroy a terrorist group and avenge the death of his brother. Along with John Leguizamo and Patrick Swayze, Snipes played a drag queen in the 1995 comedy To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar. In the film, the three men portray drag queens who are on their way to a beauty pageant when their car breaks down in a small town. Stranded, the three men become involved in the lives and problems of the town's inhabitants. In 1995, Snipes also played the role of James in the highly acclaimed film adaptation of Terry Mcmillan's novel Waiting to Exhale.

In 1996, Snipes starred in the action thriller The Fan. Snipes appeared in the role of Bobby Rayburn, a star baseball player who is stalked by an overzealous fan, played by Robert DeNiro. The fan becomes psychotic after Rayburn falls into a batting slump, and kidnaps Rayburn's young son. That same year, Snipes narrated and served as the executive producer of the documentary John Henrik Clarke: A Great and Mighty Walk. He also landed the role of George Du Vaul in the movie America's Dream, which aired on HBO.

Snipes maintained a presence on the big screen in 1997. In the film Murder at 1600 Snipes starred as Harlan Regis, a detective who is called upon to investigate a murder at the White House. Critics generally gave the film poor reviews. Although Roger Moore of Journal Now called the premise of the film "preposterous," he noted that Snipes as Harlan Regis is "properly jaded, efficient, and annoyed." Susan Wloszczyna of USA Today remarked that Murder at 1600 is "a fairly diverting game of whodunit, like a big screen version of Clue, until it sinks into routine thriller antics and wraps up preposterously." Snipes also appeared as Max, a successful ad executive who travels from his home in Los Angeles to New York to visit a friend who is dying of AIDS, in the film One Night Stand. While in New York, Max has an affair with a stranger and begins to question the meaning of his life. Although One Night Stand generally received poor reviews, Snipes received a best actor award for his work in the film at the 1997 Venice Film Festival.

In 1998, Snipes teamed with Tommy Lee Jones and Robert Downey Jr. in the action thriller U.S. Marshals. In the film Snipes played the role of Sheridan, a man who is falsely accused of murdering two government agents. As Sheridan tries to clear his name, he is pursued by U.S. Marshal Sam Gerard (Tommy Lee Jones) and his assistant John Royce (Robert Downey, Jr.) The film received mixed reviews. Snipes also appeared in Down in the Delta, a film directed by poet Maya Angelou. The film was produced by Snipes's production company, Amen Ra Films, and aired on Showtime. Snipes also played a half-human, half-vampire who tries to save humanity from a race of vampires in the film Blade. Michael O'Sullivan of The Washington Post remarked that the film's "stomach-turning special effects, bone-crunching martial arts, and cynical humor will more than satisfy any action-film addict's need for a fix of eye-popping escapist adrenaline." Charles Taylor of Salon Magazine noted that Blade "in no way resembles a good movie, but its combination of music-video bombast, goth-rock sensibility, high-tech industrial production design, cold-blooded glossy magazine visuals, high-fashion club culture, horror movies, blaxploitation movies, Hong Kong movies, and comic-book nihilism make it diverting trash." In addition to his starring role, Snipes was also the producer of Blade.

Through hard work and perseverance, Wesley Snipes has become one of the country's most successful African American actors. However, Hollywood stardom can also lead to enormous pressure. "It's a stressful life," Snipes told Lynn Norment of Ebony, "It has benefits and perks, but it's highly stressful. The more you do and the more money you make, the more stress there is." To cope with the stresses of his daily life, Snipes has developed a deeply-rooted spirituality. As he remarked to Norment, "I think that's the only way I've been able to survive."

Awards

Cable television's ACE Award for best actor for his performance in Vietnam Story; Best Actor award for One Night Stand, Venice Film Festival, 1997.

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Atlanta Constitution, August 7, 1990.
  • Boston Globe, June 7, 1991.
  • Ebony, November 1997.
  • Entertainment Weekly, September 27, 1991; April 10, 1992.
  • Journal Now, April 18, 1997.
  • Los Angeles Times, April 13, 1991; May 19, 1991; June 29, 1991.
  • Newsweek, April 22, 1991; June 10, 1991.
  • New York Newsday, October 8, 1993.
  • New York Times, August 24, 1990; March 8, 1991; March 27, 1991; June 7, 1991, November 6, 1992.
  • New Yorker, July 26, 1993.
  • Premiere, July 1991.
  • Rolling Stone, August 22, 1991.
  • Salon, August 20, 1998.
  • USA Today, December 1, 1998.
  • Washington Post, June 7, 1991, April 21, 1998.

— B. Kimberly Taylor and David G. Oblender

 
Quotes By: Wesley Snipes
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Quotes:

"In the beginning, all I wanted to do was to be a singer and a dancer. That was my real groove, my real interest. When it came to doing films, my biggest goal was to do a commercial."

 
Wikipedia: Wesley Snipes
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Wesley Snipes

Snipes in September 2008
Born Wesley Trent Snipes
July 31, 1962 (1962-07-31) (age 46)
Orlando, Florida, U.S.
Occupation Film actor, Martial artist, Film producer
Years active 1986–present
Spouse(s) April Duboise (1985-1990)
Nikki Park (2003-present)

Wesley Trent Snipes (born July 31, 1962) is an American actor, film producer and martial artist. He has starred in action-adventures, thrillers, and dramatic feature films but is best known for his role as Blade in the Blade trilogy. In 1991, the actor formed a production company called Amen Ra Films and a subsidiary, Black Dot Media, to develop projects for film and television. Snipes has been training in martial arts since age twelve, earning the rank of fifth dan black belt in Shotokan Karate. He has also trained as a student of Capoeira under Mestre Jelon Vieira and in a number of other disciplines including various styles of Kung Fu.

In 2008, Snipes was convicted on three misdemeanor counts of willful failure to file federal income tax returns, and on April 24 sentenced to three years in prison.[1] On May 22, the trial court ruled that Snipes may remain free while his appeal is being considered.[2]

Contents

Early life

Snipes was born July 31, 1962, in Orlando, Florida, the son of Marian, a teacher's aide, and an aircraft engineer father.[3] He grew up in the Bronx, New York City and attended the famed John Hopkins School, but moved back to Florida before he could graduate. After graduating from Jones High School in Orlando,[1] Snipes returned to New York and attended the State University of New York at Purchase, before being asked to leave the prestigious Acting Conservatory his junior year.

Career

Acting

A 26-year-old Snipes was discovered by an agent while performing in a competition. He made his film debut in the Goldie Hawn vehicle Wildcats. In 1987, he appeared as Michael Jackson's nemesis in the Martin Scorsese directed music video "Bad" (he is seen in only the long version of the video) and the feature film Streets of Gold.

Snipe's performance in the music video "Bad" caught the eye of director Spike Lee. Snipes turned down a small role in Lee's Do the Right Thing for the larger part of Willie Mays Hays in Major League, beginning a succession of box-office hits for Snipes. Lee would later cast Snipes as the jazz saxophonist Shadow Henderson in Mo' Better Blues and as the lead in the interracial romance drama Jungle Fever. Another important role for Snipes was the powerful drug lord Nino Brown in New Jack City, which was written specifically for him by Barry Michael Cooper. Another film in which his character was involved in drugs was the somber movie Sugar Hill.

Although Snipes is more remembered for his roles in action films like Passenger 57, Demolition Man (with Sylvester Stallone), Money Train, U.S. Marshals (a sequel of The Fugitive) and Rising Sun (with Sean Connery), he has also had success in comedies like White Men Can't Jump, and To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar where he played a drag queen together with Patrick Swayze and John Leguizamo. Snipes has also been critically acclaimed[citation needed] for his roles in dramas like The Waterdance and Disappearing Acts.

In 1997, he won the Best Actor Volpi Cup at the Venice Film Festival for his performance in New Line Cinema's One Night Stand. 1998 marked Snipes's largest commercial success with the opening of Blade, for New Line Cinema, which has grossed over $150 million worldwide. The film turned into a successful series. He also received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and an honorary doctorate from his alma mater, SUNY/Purchase, for his outstanding achievements in film.

Most of his latest films have been released straight-to-DVD. His latest films are The Shooter (also known as The Contractor), filmed in Bulgaria and the UK, with Charles Dance, Lena Heady, Eliza Bennett, and the upcoming Gallowwalker, set to be released in 2009.

Snipes was originally slated to play one of the four leads in Spike Lee's 2008 war film, Miracle at St. Anna but had to leave the film due to his widely-publicized tax problems, and his role eventually went to Derek Luke.[4]

Snipes made a comeback performance in Brooklyn's Finest as Caz, a supporting character.He also had to turn down the part of 'Hale Caesar' in The Expendables due to not being allowed to leave the United States without the court's approval

Other ventures

In the late 1990s, Snipes and his brother started a security firm called the Royal Guard of Amen-Ra, dedicated to providing VIPs with bodyguards trained in law enforcement and martial arts.[5]

In 2000, the business was investigated for alleged ties to an extremist religious cult called the United Nuwaubian Nation of Moors. It turns out that Snipes had spotted 200 acres (0.81 km2) of land with the intention to buy and use for his business academy, which were close to the aforesaid religious cult compound in Putnam County, Georgia. Both Snipes's business and the religious cult had Egyptian motifs as their symbols, which prompted people to hypothesize ties between them.[5]

Snipes and his brother ended up not buying the land and established their company in Florida, Antigua, and Africa, while the religious cult compound was raided in 2002 and their leader convicted.[5]

In 2005, Snipes was in negotiations to fight Fear Factor star and UFC commentator Joe Rogan in an upcoming event.[6]

Personal life

Snipes has been linked to a number of women including Jada Pinkett Smith, Sanaa Lathan, Halle Berry, and Jennifer Lopez. He has been married twice; first, to April Snipes from 1985-1990 with whom he has a son, Jelani Asar Snipes, born in 1988. Jelani had a cameo role in Snipes' 1990 film Mo' Better Blues.

In 2003, Snipes wed painter Nakyung "Nikki" Park, who is the mother of his four youngest children: son Akhenaten Kihwa-T Snipes; daughter Iset Jua-T Snipes (born July 31, 2001); son Alaafia Jehu-T Snipes (born May 26, 2004); and son Alimayu Moa-T Snipes (born March 26, 2007). Snipes spends a lot of time in Park's home country of South Korea, which he calls his "second home."

Snipes has a younger half brother A.D. Snipes, a comedian residing in San Antonio, TX, who has appeared in the TNT Classics films Rough Riders and Buffalo Soldiers, and has appeared on BET's Comicview and HBO's Def Comedy Jam.

Snipes is a former Muslim, having converted from Christianity to Islam in 1978. He later left Islam in 1988.[7]

Snipes's apartment was destroyed by the collapse of the World Trade Center's Twin Towers during the September 11 attacks on 2001. He happened to have been delayed at the gym where he was working out, otherwise he would have been home at that moment.[8]

A September 24, 2002 Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee press release listed Wesley Snipes as an "artist who is supporting" a $6 million fundraiser with tickets ranged from $500 to $250,000."[9]

Legal troubles

Tax problems

Federal income tax convictions

On October 12, 2006, Wesley Snipes, Eddie Ray Kahn, and Douglas P. Rosile were charged with one count of conspiring to defraud the United States under 18 U.S.C. § 371 and one count of knowingly making or aiding and abetting the making of a false and fraudulent claim for payment against the United States, under 18 U.S.C. § 287 and 18 U.S.C. § 2. Snipes was also charged with six counts of willfully failing to file Federal income tax returns by their filing dates under 26 U.S.C. § 7203.[10] The conspiracy charge against Snipes included allegations that he filed a false amended return including a false tax refund claim of over US$4 million for the year 1996 and a false amended return including a false tax refund claim of over US$7.3 million for the year 1997. The government alleged that Snipes attempted to obtain fraudulent tax refunds using a tax protester theory called the "861 argument" (essentially, an argument that the domestic income of U.S. citizens and residents is not taxable). The indictment said Snipes used accountants who already had a history of filing false returns to obtain refund payments for their clients.[11] The government also charged that Snipes sent three worthless, fictitious "bills of exchange" to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the amounts of $1,000,000 (on November 30, 2000), $12,000,000 (January 18, 2001), and $1,000,000 (September 10, 2002), with each accompanied by an IRS tax payment voucher coupon.[12]

Under the alleged deal, the firm American Rights Litigators was to receive, from the clients, an amount equal to 20 percent of the tax refunds obtained for those clients.[13] The government also charged that Snipes failed to file tax returns for the years 1999 through 2004.[14]

In a December 4, 2006 letter from Snipes in response to his indictment, he declared himself "a non-resident alien" of the United States (in reality Snipes is a US born citizen).[15] Snipes said he was being made an example of and unfairly targeted by prosecutors because of his fame in connection with the federal tax fraud investigation.[13] He attempted unsuccessfully to get the trial moved from Ocala, Florida on the ground that racist attitudes in that town would prejudice his chance for a fair trial.[16] Snipes faced the possibility of up to sixteen years in prison and substantial fines if convicted on all the charges.[17] The trial began on Monday, January 14, 2008, in Ocala, Florida,[18] with opening statements beginning on Wednesday, January 16, 2008.[19]

On February 1, 2008, Snipes was acquitted on the felony count of conspiracy to defraud the government and on the felony count of filing a false claim with the government. He was, however, found guilty on three misdemeanor counts of failing to file Federal income tax returns (and acquitted on three other "failure to file" charges). His co-defendants, Douglas P. Rosile and Eddie Ray Kahn, were convicted on the conspiracy and false claim charges in connection with the income tax refund claims filed for Snipes.[20][21]

On April 24, 2008, Snipes was sentenced to three years in prison for willful failure to file federal income tax returns under 26 U.S.C. § 7203.[22][23][24] While defense lawyers urged leniency, prosecutors argued that Snipes should be made an example of because of his fame.[1] Kahn was sentenced to ten years in prison, and Rosile was sentenced to four and half years in prison.[25] As of April 2009, Snipes remains free on bail to work, even traveling internationally, while he appeals his conviction.[26][27]

Property taxes

Snipes failed to pay approximately $70,000 in local property taxes, interest and penalties on a home in Alpine, New Jersey, owned by his company, Kymberlyte Production Services International, Inc. In December 2007, the taxing authority of the borough of Alpine, New Jersey sold the tax lien on the home to a third party. Snipes has two years to redeem the property or risk foreclosure.[28] In 2005, Snipes defaulted on California property taxes, owing over $171,000 in property taxes in that state.[29] As of February 2008, a home owned by Snipes in Florida is subject to delinquent property taxes of over $15,000.[30]

Report of additional federal tax problems

In April 2009, the Los Angeles Wave reported that Snipes has refused to answer certain questions in connection with a talent agency lawsuit in which the agency claims that Snipes owes over $1.4 million in commissions. Snipes is reported to have taken the position that his answers could incriminate him in a federal tax investigation. Lawyers for the talent agency stated that Snipes' lawyer advised the lawyers for the talent agency that "Snipes and his [ . . . ] companies are under an additional investigation by the Internal Revenue Service and Snipes would be asserting his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination and would not answer any questions at his deposition."[31]

New Line lawsuit

In 2005, Snipes sued New Line Cinema, and David S. Goyer (director of Blade: Trinity) claiming that the studio did not pay his full salary, that he was intentionally cut out of casting decisions and filmmaking process, despite being one of the producers, and that his character's screen time was reduced in favor of costars, Ryan Reynolds and Jessica Biel.

Snipes contends that Goyer, his fellow producers, and New Line kept him out of the project's decision process, which ended up harming the film's performance (it made just $52 million, compared to the previous installments that had made $70 million and $82 million respectively). He says that a portion of his salary - $3.6 million - was withheld as punishment. The suit is still pending.[5]

Passport controversy

In June 2005, Snipes was detained in South Africa at Johannesburg International Airport for allegedly trying to pass through the airport with a fake South African passport. [32]

Loaded weapon conviction

In 1993, Snipes was fined $1,000 and placed on two-year unsupervised probation in California after pleading no contest to a misdemeanor charge of carrying a loaded weapon.[33]

Reckless driving conviction

In April 1994, while on probation on the California gun conviction, Snipes was briefly detained and charged with reckless driving after he crashed his Kawasaki 1100cc motorcycle at the end of a thirty mile, 120 mile per hour chase with a Florida Highway Patrol officer and police helicopters. Snipes had been returning from a family visit in Orlando, and was in the area north of Port St. Lucie, on his way to Key Largo in connection with the making of the film Drop Zone. Neither Snipes nor the officer was seriously injured in the crash.[34] Snipes eventually pleaded no contest to the charge of reckless driving, and was sentenced to perform 80 hours of community service.[35]

Awards and nominations

Award Category Title Result
MTV Movie Awards Best Fight Blade Nominated
Best Villain Demolition Man
Best Screen-duo White Men Can't Jump
Best Villain New Jack City
Best Kiss White Men Can't Jump
Venice Film Festival Best Actor (Volpi Cup) One Night Stand Won
Hollywood Walk of Fame 7020 Hollywood Blvd Awarded
Independent Spirit Awards Best Supporting Actor The Waterdance Nominated
Image Awards Outstanding Lead Actor in a Television Movie or Mini-Series America's Dream Won
Outstanding Lead Actor in a Motion Picture New Jack City Won
CableACE Awards Best Actor in a Dramatic Series Vietnam War Story Won
Blockbuster Entertainment Awards Favorite Duo - Action/Adventure U.S. Marshals Nominated
Favorite Actor - Horror Blade Won
Black Reel Awards Best Actor (Motion Picture) Undisputed Nominated
Network/Cable - Best Actor Disappearing Acts
WorldFest Houston Gold Special Jury Award - Best Actors (shared) The Waterdance Won

Filmography

Year Title Role Notes
1986 Wildcats Trumaine
1987 Streets of Gold Roland Jenkins
Vietnam War Story II Young Soldier Direct-to-video
1988 Critical Condition Ambulance Driver Cameo appearance
1989 Major League Willie "Mays" Hayes
1990 King of New York Thomas Flanigan
Mo' Better Blues Shadow Handerson
1991 Jungle Fever Flipper "Flip" Purify
New Jack City Nino Brown
1992 Passenger 57 John Cutter
White Men Can't Jump Sidney "Syd" Deane
1993 The Waterdance Raymond Hill
Boiling Point Jimmy Mercer
Demolition Man Simon Phoenix
Rising Sun Lt. Webster "Web" Smith
1994 Drop Zone Pete Nessip
Sugar Hill Roemello Skugs
1995 To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar Noxeema Jackson
Money Train John
Waiting to Exhale James Wheeler uncredited
1997 The Fan Bobby "Bob" Rayburn
America's Dream George Du Vail TV
Murder at 1600 Detective Harlan Regins
1998 One Night Stand Maximilian "Max" Carlyle Volpi Cup (Best Actor) in Venice Film Festival
Blade Blade/Eric Brooks/The Daywalker also fight choregraphy and producer
U.S. Marshals Mark J. Sheridan/Warren/Roberts
Down in the Delta Will Sinclair Also executive producer
Masters of the Martial Arts presented by Wesley Snipes Himself Documentary
Jackie Chan: My Story Himself Documentary
Futuresport Obike Fixx TV
1999 Play It to the Bone Ringside Fan Cameo appearance
2000 The Art of War Neil Shaw
Disappearing Acts Franklin Swift Also producer
2002 Blade II Blade/Eric Brooks/The Daywalker also fight and coordinator and producer
2002 ZigZag David "Dave" Fletcher
Liberty Stands Still Joe
Undisputed Monroe "Undisputed" Hutchens Also producer
2004 Unstoppable Dean Cage
Blade: Trinity Blade/Eric Brooks/The Daywalker also producer
2005 7 Seconds Jack Tulliver Direct-to-DVD
The Marksman Painter Direct-to-DVD
2006 Hard Luck Lucky Direct-to-DVD
Chaos Jason York/Scott Curtis/Lorenz
The Detonator Sonni Griffith Direct-to-DVD
2007 The Contractor James Dial Direct-to-DVD
2008 The Art of War II: Betrayal Neil Shaw Direct-to-DVD
2009 Gallowwalker Aman completed
2009 Brooklyn's Finest Caz post-production
2009 Untitled:James Brown Biopic James Brown also producer

TV series

Year Title Role Episode
1986 Miami Vice Silk Streetwise
1987 Vietnam War Story Young Soldier An Old Ghost Walks the Earth
1989 A Man Called Hawk Nicholas Murdock Choice of Chance
The Days and Nights of Molly Dodd Hood Here's Why You Should Always Make Your Bed in the Morning
1990 H.E.L.P. Lou Barton Series lead
1997 Happily Ever After The Pied Piper The Pied Piper
2002 The Bernie Mac Show Duke Rope-a-Dope

References

  1. ^ a b c Snipes sentenced to three years BBC News retrieved April 24, 2008
  2. ^ Stephen Hudak, "Judge grants appellate bond for Wesley Snipes", Orlando Sentinel, May 22, 2008.
  3. ^ 1ST PERSON: Meet Wesley Snipes. | Knight Ridder/Tribune (via Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service) (August, 2000)
  4. ^ Collis, Clark. "Fall Movie Summer Preview, September: Miracle at St. Anna." Entertainment Weekly, Iss. #1007/1008, August 22/29, 2008, pg. 42-45.
  5. ^ a b c d Nashawaty, Chris (December 21, 2007). "The Trials of Wesley Snipes". Entertainment Weekly, p. 45-51.
  6. ^ Joe Rogan vs. Wesley Snipes in Ultimate Fighting Match
  7. ^ Wesley Snipes, Hollywood's hottest new star talks about: his divorce, his days on the streets and why he doesn't have 'jungle fever. Ebony Magazine. Sept, 1991 by Laura B. Randolph
  8. ^ Facts about Wesley Snipes - WesleySnipes.com
  9. ^ Media Research Centre, Oct. 1, 2002 [1].
  10. ^ Findlaw
  11. ^ Findlaw
  12. ^ Superseding Indictment, Oct. 12, 2006, United States v. Wesley Trent Snipes, entry 6, page 8, paragraphs 29 & 30 and page 9, paragraph 39, case no. 5:06-cr-00022-WTH-GRJ, United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida (Ocala Div.).
  13. ^ a b "Wesley Snipes Arrested in Tax Fraud Case", Forbes, 8 December 2006.
  14. ^ apnews.myway
  15. ^ "Feds: Snipes Declared Himself Alien, Warned Against Past Tax Prosecution", Foxnews.com, January 25, 2008.
  16. ^ Carmen Gentile, "Wesley Snipes Could Face Wrath of IRS", Fox News, Jan. 15, 2008].
  17. ^ The sixteen years was calculated from one year on each of the six counts under 26 U.S.C. section 7203, five years under 18 U.S.C. section 371, and five years under 18 U.S.C. section 287.
  18. ^ Travis Reed, "Snipes' tax fraud trial opens in Ocala", Associated Press, Jan. 14, 2008.
  19. ^ "Jury selected in Wesley Snipes tax trial", Associated Press, Jan. 15, 2008].
  20. ^ "Wesley Snipes acquitted of federal tax fraud," MSNBC, Feb. 1, 2008, at [2].
  21. ^ Snipes acquitted of tax-fraud, conspiracy, Associated Press, as reported by CNN, February 1, 2006.
  22. ^ "Snipes Sentenced To 36 Months". Orlando: WESH. 2008-04-24. http://www.wesh.com/news/15979487/detail.html. Retrieved on 2008-04-24. 
  23. ^ See ABC Action News, 24 April 2008, at [3].
  24. ^ See the Orlando Sentinel, 24 April 2008, at this page.
  25. ^ Stephen Hudak, April 24, 2008, "Wesley Snipes sentenced to three years in federal tax case," Orlando Sentinel, at [4].
  26. ^ http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/newsletter/lat-tax_snipes_kh315bnc20090413170344,0,4237606.photo
  27. ^ http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,512041,00.html
  28. ^ Karen Sudol, "Delinquent Snipes loses Alpine home," Feb. 6, 2008, The Record Online Edition, NorthJersey.com, North Jersey Media Group, at [5].
  29. ^ J.J. MacNab, "Was Snipes really just asking the IRS innocent questions?", Feb. 12, 2008, The Snipes Trial, at [6].
  30. ^ Id.
  31. ^ "Wesley Snipes pleads fifth, won’t answer more lawsuit questions," April 28, 2009, Los Angeles Wave, at [7].
  32. ^ IOL: Hollywood star's fake passport 'never probed'
  33. ^ Shauna Snow, "Morning Report: Legal File (Entertainment Desk)," Oct. 1, 1993, Los Angeles Times, part F, page 2, column 1, as reprinted at Quatloos.com at [8].
  34. ^ Joe Brogan, "Crash ends case of Wesley Snipes," April 6, 1994, Palm Beach Post, A section, p. 1A (Palm Beach, Florida), as reprinted at Quatloos.com at [9].
  35. ^ Susannah A. Nesmith, "Actor gets community service for chase," Aug. 4, 1994, Palm Beach Post, A section, p. 1A (Palm Beach, Florida), as reprinted at Quatloos.com at [10].

External links


 
 
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Hard Luck (2006 Thriller Film)
The Marksman (2005 Action Film)
Streets of Gold (1986 Drama Film)

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