Credit: MGN

โ€˜The Measure of a Manโ€™

Legendary actor Sidney Poitier, who broke barriers and stood for justice and Black lives during the most tumultuous times of the civil rights movement, has died.

Poitier, whose iconic 71-year career, included starring roles in โ€œA Raisin in the Sun,โ€ โ€œGuess Whoโ€™s Coming to Dinnerโ€ and โ€œUptown Saturday Night,โ€ was 94. His cause of death has yet to be confirmed.

According to PBS, Poitier moved to New York City at age 16 after living in the Bahamas for several years with his family. In the Big Apple, he found work as a janitor at the American Negro Theater in exchange for acting lessons. From there, he took up acting roles in plays for the next several years until his film debut in the racially charged, โ€œNo Way Out.โ€

Race and social justice would become central themes in much of his work throughout the โ€˜50s and โ€˜60s.

A Broadway play focused on the life of the Bahamian-born star, who earned his first Academy Award nomination in 1959 for his work in โ€œThe Defiant Ones,โ€ is in the works.

As noted in the New York Post, the nomination was significant to America as he was the first African American to be nominated for Best Actor. That role also earned him a Golden Globe win and a BAFTA Award.

Poitier broke even more barriers in 1963 with his hit film โ€œLilies of the Field.โ€ The following year, Poitier became the first African American to ever win the Best Actor at the Academy Awards.

His career continued to climb for several more years. In 1967 he starred in โ€œGuess Whoโ€™s Coming to Dinner,โ€ an interracial romance comedy that ruffled feathers in America. Then came other memorable films, โ€œThey Call Me Mister Tibbs,โ€ the sequel to the controversial blockbuster โ€œIn the Heat of the Night,โ€ and โ€œUptown Saturday Nightโ€ opposite Bill Cosby.

He released several more works; โ€œThe Measure of a Man: A Spiritual Autobiography (2007)โ€ โ€œLife Beyond Measure: Letters to My Great-Granddaughter (2008).โ€

โ€œAs I entered this world, I would leave behind the nurturing of my family and my home, but in another sense, I would take their protection with me,โ€ he said in โ€œMeasure of a Man.โ€ โ€œThe lessons I had learned, the feelings of groundedness and belonging that have been woven into my character there, would be my companions on the journey.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is the NNPA Newswire senior national correspondent.



Stacy M. Brown is the NNPA Newswire senior national correspondent. I'm the co-author of Blind Faith: The Miraculous Journey of Lula Hardaway and her son, Stevie Wonder (Simon & Schuster) and Michael...