http://www.peoplesworld.org/today-in-black-history-actor-sidney-poitier-born/

Today in black history: Actor Sidney Poitier born
  a.. 
 
by: Teresa Albano 
February 20 2013 
tags: Black History Month, arts, entertainment, racism, film, movies, Hollywood


Groundbreaking actor Sidney Poitier celebrates his 86th birthday today. Born to 
Bahamian parents in Miami, Fla., while they were selling produce from their 
island farm, Poitier began life in humble working-class circumstances, which he 
never forgot. But through a unique combination of talent, tenacity, 
intelligence, hard work and a touch of good luck, he is now considered a legend 
in his own time, particularly for breaking down Hollywood's version of Jim Crow 
racism.

"Poitier was to Hollywood what Jackie Robinson was to major league baseball: 
simply put, the man who broke the color barrier," writes All Movie Guide writer 
Jason Ankeny. "An actor, director, and producer, he forever altered the racial 
perceptions long held by both motion picture audiences and executives, rising 
to superstar status in an industry forever dominated on both sides of the 
camera by whites while becoming the first African-American ever to take home an 
Oscar for Best Actor" for his role in Lilies of the Field.

Best known for To Sir, with Love; In the Heat of the Night; and Guess Who's 
Coming to Dinner, three films that were both critically acclaimed and box 
office successes, Poitier ranks among the American Film Institute's top 25 
Greatest Male Stars of All Time.

Poitier grew up on Cat Island in The Bahamas, and moved to Miami at the age of 
15 to live with his brother. At the age of 17, he moved to New York City and 
held a string of jobs as a dishwasher. He later joined the United States Army, 
serving as a medical assistant in World War II. His first acting breakthrough 
came with a role in the American Negro Theater production of Lysistrata.

Poitier elegantly combined his extraordinary talents as an actor with his 
commitment to the struggle for civil rights, equality and dignity for all Black 
Americans. He marched with Martin Luther King Jr., and fellow artists like 
Ossie Davis, Harry Belafonte and Paul Newman, in the historic 1963 March on 
Washington for Jobs and Freedom. Films he starred in, like The Defiant Ones and 
Raisin in the Sun, were often social commentaries on racism while Poitier 
infused his roles with a "cool boil," always eloquent and dignified.

As Aram Goudsouzian, author of "Sidney Poitier," writes, "If Sidney Poitier had 
an acting trademark, it was the cool boil. In the movies, when injustice drove 
him to the brink, he became a pot of outrage on the verge of bubbling over. His 
eyes would blaze. His mahogany skin would tighten. His words would gush out in 
spasms of angry eloquence, carefully measured by grim, simmering pauses."

They may have called him Mr. Tibbs in the 1967 film In the Heat of the Night, 
but in 1974 he became a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire 
with the official title (not just film title) "Sir." In 2009, President Barack 
Obama awarded Poitier the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the top U.S. honor for 
civilians.

Photo: Sidney Poitier receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom Award from 
President Obama, Aug. 12, 2009. (CC/White House) 


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