Another great actor lost. Sidney lived in the Bahamas when it was still a British Colony. He was born in Miami in 1927 when his father (a farmer) and his mother (in her 7th month of pregnancy) went there for a weekend to sell produce. She unexpectedly went into labor and gave birth. Sidney was not expected to survive. Being born in America, he held dual citizenship. He permanently moved to the states at the age of 15 to be with extended family, and lied about his age to enlist in the Army during WW2. He worked in an Army psychiatric hospital and--horrified at what he saw there--faked mental illness in order to obtain a discharge. (He actually fessed up to the fact he was faking, and the sympathetic Army doctor helped him out, anyway.) He then went into acting, having the usual fits & starts that many in the profession do. His specific shortcoming--in an era when black actors were cast in roles where they also sang--was being tone deaf. There's lots to his biography. He was a trail-blazer in an era when black actors & actresses were just beginning to enter the mainstream (Poitier started out in the American Negro Theater), yet he was not of American culture, so sometimes took controversial roles that other black actors rejected as being demeaning (such as the lead role in the film adaptation of Porgy and Bess.) He took roles that some criticized as being one-dimensional (no real character flaws or depth) in movies that pushed back against stereotypes of American blacks, but that was during a transitional era in film, and his acting was done from the perspective of an immigrant. I've always enjoyed his work. And he came across as being a genuinely nice guy. R.I.P.
Oh my goodness; I'm sorry to hear this. I was a big fan. I recently watched "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner" again for the umpteenth time.
Topic Detour I just read that at the time, interracial marriage was still illegal in 17 states. Spencer Bonaventure Tracy was ill during the making of that movie, and died 2 weeks after he finished filming his role. There's a story there about Hepburn moving in with him 4 years prior due to Tracy's lifestyle-inflicted medical issues, to include a coma and kidney failure 2 years before making that movie. Those tears of hers in Tracey's famous last scene are real. Back On Topic I'd be hard-pressed to pick a specific favorite Poitier film. In The Heat Of The Night is certainly among the top 5, as is A Raisin In The Sun (Louis Gossett Jr's film debut.)
I'd have to say In The Heat Of The Night was not only his best films but, IMHO, also one of the best films period.
Thank you Sidney, for all of the joy that you brought with you into the World! May you Rest in peace! Sidney Poitier on winning an Oscar® for Best Actor for his work in "Lilies of the Field" - 36th Annual Academy Awards®.
Don Warrington, the Trinidadian-British stage actor – and star of Death in Paradise and Rising Damp – pays tribute to a Black Hollywood pioneer "He climbed the ladder but he didn’t pull it up after him. He went: “This is it! You can come here too, and if I can help, I will.” Dignity and panache and grace’ … Sidney Poitier at the Vanity Fair Oscar party in 2014. Photograph: Larry Busacca/VF14/Getty Images for Vanity Fair
Just my personal favorites over the decades, not even close to the true number of films he participated in. In the Heat of the Night Lilies of the Field The Defiant Ones The Bedford Incident Buck and the Preacher
Turner Classic Movies has a 12-film tribute to the late Sidney Poitier starting Saturday, February 19, 2022: TCM Tribute to Sidney Poitier