 |

1992: Sidney Poitier
20th AFI Life Achievement Award
SIDNEY POITIER: LIFE ACHIEVEMENT AWARD 1992 TRIBUTE ADDRESS
Sidney Poitier has had to carry a heavier load of social significance than just about any other actor in history. In his more than forty feature films, he rarely had the luxury of ignoring the larger implications of his characters actions. He was always judged twice: once for his performance and once for the worth of that performance to the advancement of human relations. Thats a lot to ask of any mere mortal. But then, theres nothing "mere" about Sidney Poitier.
Sidney Poitiers characters doctors, detectives, lawyers, gunslingers, scientists, soldiers tend to be men of control, men who subdue volcanic rage with reason and intellect. Theyre willing to be reasonable up to a point, but when that anger simmers close to the surface, look out. Poiters jaw clenches, those remarkable piercing eyes flash with fury, and his voice lowers to a strained, aching whisper. But these characters know that there are bridges to be built, doors to be opened. They know that to survive you have to stay the course. When redneck sheriff Bill Gillespie (Rod Steiger) condescendingly purrs in In The Heat of the Night (1967), "What do they call you up in Philadelphia, Virgil?", Poiter says, in measured tones that suggest barely capped dynamite, They call me MISTER Tibbs!" His words were louder than a gunshot; they struck a responsive chord with audiences that continues to reverberate today.
Poiter imbues every one of his roles with what George Stevens, Jr., calls his "dignity, strength and quiet sense of outrage." He has a warm and attractive screen presence, a powerful, often brilliant, acting technique and a face that promises to remain leading-man handsome for life. These are the attributes that made him a movie star. But Sidney Poiters impact far exceeds his ability to put on a good show. In his amazing, unparalleled career, he has helped change set-in-cement attitudes, he has paved the way for countless artists who would not have had a chance of success a generation earlier. And he has stood as a beacon of excellence and hope and happiness to millions and millions of moviegoers around the world.
It seems unthinkable that such a powerful force might never have had the opportunity to shine, but the truth is that there was virtually no precedent for Poiters success. Before he hit the screen in his first feature film, No Way Out (1950), black actors generally had to make do with supporting roles, usually as comic relief. He grew up with great admiration for performers like Hattie McDaniel, Louise Beavers and Paul Robeson, people who rarely got to show the extent of their gifts on screen, but he never allowed himself to be cowed by the enormous odds against him.
"I was different," Poiter has said. "I never asked anybody, What do you think of my chances? Had I asked, 99 percent of them would have said, Dont be ridiculous. The statistics were there, and they were realistic statistics."
Sidney Poitier, virtually by himself, changed those statistics. In no time flat, Poitier became a bona fide Movie Star. He was nominated for an Academy Award in 1958 for his role as an escaped convict handcuffed to a white racist (Tony Curtis) in Stanley Kramers the Defiant Ones and took home an Oscar as Best Actor for Lilies of the Field (1963). From 1967 to 1969, Poiter was one of the 10 top box-office attractions in the country in 1968 he headed that list over such luminaries as Paul Newman, John Wayne, Julie Andrews and Clint Eastwood.
He began directing films in 1972 with Buck and the Preacher, and that aspect of his career has seen enormous success Uptown Saturday Night, Lets Do It Again, Stir Crazy
the list goes on.
"I was looking for something to define me," he says. "Being an actor was not as compelling for me as was being a certain type of person. It would have been the same if I had been a postal worker or a grocery clerk or anything. I would have gone in with the intent to be the best, to be productive and to reach for a certain kind if distinction. That was, and is, the way I am."
Sidney Poitier has racked up such an impressive list of achievements including tonights award that its easy to transform him into some kind of societal footnote. In fact, Poiters screen work is always about quality, skill and emotion. He deserves the Life Achievement Award not just because he was a trailblazer but because he is one of the finest American screen actors.
FILMOGRAPHY (as of award year)
THE LAST BRICKMAKER IN AMERICA (2001) ....Henry Cobb
Television Actor
THE SIMPLE LIFE OF NOAH DEARBORN (1999) ....Noah Dearborn
Television Actor
FREE OF EDEN (1999) ....Will Cleamons
Television Actor/Producer
SCANDALIZE MY NAME: STORIES FROM THE BLACKLIST (1998) ....Reverend Msimangu
Motion Picture Actor
DAVID AND LISA (1998) ....Dr. Jack Miller
Television Actor
THE JACKAL (1997) ....Carter Preston
Motion Picture Actor
MANDELA AND DE KLERK (1997) ....Nelson Mandela
Television Actor
TO SIR WITH LOVE 2 (1996) ....Mark Thackeray
Television Actor
A GOOD DAY TO DIE (1995) ....Gypsy Smith
Television Actor
SNEAKERS (1992) ....Donald Crease
Motion Picture Actor
SEPARATE BUT EQUAL (1991)
....Thurgood Marshall
Television Actor
GHOST DAD (1990)
Motion Picture Director
LITTLE NIKITA (1988)
....Roy Parmenter
Motion Picture Actor
SHOOT TO KILL (1988)
....Warren Stantin
Motion Picture Actor
FAST FORWARD (1985)
Motion Picture Director
HANKY PANKY (1982)
Motion Picture Director
STIR CRAZY (1980)
Motion Picture Director
A PIECE OF THE ACTION (1977)
....Manny Durrell
Motion Picture Director/Actor
LET'S DO IT AGAIN (1975)
....Clyde Williams
Motion Picture Director/Actor
THE WILBY CONSPIRACY (1975)
....Shack Twala
Motion Picture Actor
UPTOWN SATURDAY NIGHT (1974)
....Steve Jackson
Motion Picture Director/Actor
A WARM DECEMBER (1973)
....Matt Younger
Motion Picture Director/Actor
BUCK AND THE PREACHER (1972)
....Buck
Motion Picture Director/Actor
BROTHER JOHN (1971)
....John Kane
Motion Picture Actor
THE ORGANIZATION (1971)
.... Lieutenant Virgil Tibbs
Motion Picture Actor
KING: A FILMED RECORD-MONTGOMERY TO MEMPHIS (1970)
....Narrator
Motion Picture Actor
THEY CALL ME MISTER TIBBS! (1970)
....Lieutenant Virgil Tibbs
Motion Picture Actor
THE LOST MAN (1969)
....Jason Higgs
Motion Picture Actor
FOR LOVE OF IVY (1968)
....Jack Parks
Motion Picture Actor
GUESS WHO'S COMING TO DINNER (1967)
....John Wade Prentice
Motion Picture Actor
IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT (1967)
....Detective Virgil Tibbs
Motion Picture Actor
TO SIR, WITH LOVE (1967)
....Mark Thackeray
Motion Picture Actor
DUEL AT DIABLO (1966)
....Toller
Motion Picture Actor
THE SLENDER THREAD (1966)
....Alan Newell
Motion Picture Actor
A PATCH OF BLUE (1965)
....Gordon Ralfe
Motion Picture Actor
THE BEDFORD INCIDENT (1965)
....Ben Munceford
Motion Picture Actor
THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD (1965)
....Simon of Cyrene
Motion Picture Actor
THE LONG SHIPS (1964)
....Aly Mansuh
Motion Picture Actor
LILIES OF THE FIELD (1963)
....Homer Smith
Motion Picture Actor
PRESSURE POINT (1962)
....Doctor
Motion Picture Actor
A RAISIN IN THE SUN (1961)
....Walter Lee Younger
Motion Picture Actor
PARIS BLUES (1961)
....Eddie Cook
Motion Picture Actor
ALL THE YOUNG MEN (1960)
....Sgt. Eddie Towler
Motion Picture Actor
A RAISIN IN THE SUN (1959)
....Walter Lee Younger
Selected Theatre Actor
PORGY AND BESS (1959)
....Porgy
Motion Picture Actor
THE DEFIANT ONES (1958)
....Noah Cullen
Motion Picture Actor
VIRGIN ISLAND (1958)
....Marcus
Motion Picture Actor
BAND OF ANGELES (1957)
....Rau-Rau
Motion Picture Actor
THE MARK OF THE HAWK (1957)
....Obam
Motion Picture Actor
EDGE OF THE CITY (1957)
....Tommy Tyler
Motion Picture Actor
SOMETHING OF VALUE (1957)
....Kimani Wa Karanja
Motion Picture Actor
GOOD-BYE, MY LADY (1956) ....Gates
Motion Picture Actor
BLACKBOARD JUNGLE (1955)
....Gregory W. Miller
Motion Picture Actor
GO, MAN, GO! (1954) ....Inman Jackson
Motion Picture Actor
RED BALL EXPRESS (1952)
....Corporal Andrew Robertson
Motion Picture Actor
CRY, THE BELOVED COUNTRY (1951) ....Reverend Msimangu
Motion Picture Actor
NO WAY OUT (1950)
....Doctor Luther Brooks
Motion Picture Actor
FROM WHENCE COMETH MY HELP (1949)
Motion Picture Actor
|
 |