This date in 1927 saw the birth of Sidney Poitier, American actor. 10 things you might not know about him.
His family lived in the Bahamas, which at that time was a British Crown colony, but Sidney wasn’t born there. He was born in Miami, which made him a US citizen. His father was a farmer and the family would travel to the US on business, which is why they were there when Sidney was born, two months prematurely. It was touch and go whether he’d survive, but he did, and his parents returned to the Bahamas where he grew up.
At 15, he went back to Miami, and then to New York when he was 16. He’d decided by then that he wanted to be an actor. He worked washing dishes to support himself.
He failed his first audition with the American Negro Theatre because he wasn’t able to read a script fluently. One of the waiters worked with him every night, listening to him as he read from a newspaper.
Soon after that, in 1943, Poitier lied about his age so he could join the army, since he was homeless at the time and the military would provide accommodation. He served as a medical attendant at a mental hospital in New York, but hated it and faked a mental illness to get discharged. Faced with the prospect of electric shock treatment, he confessed that he’d been faking and also that he’d lied about his age. After some therapy sessions, he was discharged.
After this he tried again for the American Negro Theatre and this time was successful, although he still had a lot of work to do. He couldn’t sing, which was something expected of actors at the time, and he still had a noticeable Bahamian accent, which he needed to work on losing.
His breakthrough film role was as a high school student in the 1955 film Blackboard Jungle. He was blacklisted for a time because he was an active member of the Committee for the Negro in the Arts (CNA).
Ultimately, though, he was a great success. He was the first African-American actor to win an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Lead Role for Lilies of the Field in 1963, and the first to place autograph, hand, and footprints in the cement at Grauman's Chinese Theatre in 1967.
In 2009, Poitier was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Barack Obama. He’d already, in 1974, been awarded an honorary knighthood of the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II. He served as as ambassador of the Bahamas to Japan, and was was a member of the board of directors of the Walt Disney Company.
He was the visual inspiration for the original illustrations of the superhero Green Lantern.
At the time of his death, aged 94, he was the last surviving Oscar nominee as Best Actor from the 1950s, and the last surviving winner from the 1960s. Incidentally, he died on the same day and in the same city as Peter Bogdanovich, who directed him in To Sir, with Love II in 1996.


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