Louis Gossett Jr, 1st Black man to win supporting actor Oscar, dies
Gossett always thought of his early career as a reverse Cinderella story, with success finding him from an early age and propelling him forward, toward his Academy Award for “An Officer and a Gentleman”
PTI
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Louis Gossett Jr
Los Angeles, 29 March
Louis Gossett Jr.,
the first Black man to win a supporting actor Oscar and an Emmy winner for his
role in the seminal TV miniseries “Roots,” has died. He was 87.
Gossett's nephew
told The Associated Press that the actor died Thursday night in Santa Monica,
California. No cause of death was revealed. Gossett always thought of his early
career as a reverse Cinderella story, with success finding him from an early
age and propelling him forward, toward his Academy Award for “An Officer and a
Gentleman.”
He earned his
first acting credit in his Brooklyn high school's production of “You Can't Take
It with You” while he was sidelined from the basketball team with an injury. “I
was hooked — and so was my audience,” he wrote in his 2010 memoir “An Actor and
a Gentleman.”
His English
teacher urged him to go into Manhattan to try out for “Take a Giant Step.” He
got the part and made his Broadway debut in 1953 at age 16. “I knew too little
to be nervous,” Gossett wrote. “In retrospect, I should have been scared to
death as I walked onto that stage, but I wasn't.”
Gossett attended
New York University on a basketball and drama scholarship. He was soon acting
and singing on TV shows hosted by David Susskind, Ed Sullivan, Red Buttons,
Merv Griffin, Jack Paar and Steve Allen. Gossett became friendly with James
Dean and studied acting with Marilyn Monroe, Martin Landau and Steve McQueen at
an offshoot of the Actors Studio taught by Frank Silvera.
In 1959, Gossett
received critical acclaim for his role in the Broadway production of “A Raisin
in the Sun” along with Sidney Poitier, Ruby Dee and Diana Sands. He went on to
become a star on Broadway, replacing Billy Daniels in “Golden Boy” with Sammy
Davis Jr. in 1964.
Gossett went to
Hollywood for the first time in 1961 to make the film version of “A Raisin in
the Sun.” He had bitter memories of that trip, staying in a cockroach-infested
motel that was one of the few places to allow Black people.
In 1968, he
returned to Hollywood for a major role in “Companions in Nightmare,” NBC's
first made-for-TV movie that starred Melvyn Douglas, Anne Baxter and Patrick
O'Neal.
This time, Gossett
was booked into the Beverly Hills Hotel and Universal Studios had rented him a
convertible. Driving back to the hotel after picking up the car, he was stopped
by a Los Angeles County sheriff's officer who ordered him to turn down the radio
and put up the car's roof before letting him go.
Within minutes, he
was stopped by eight sheriff's officers, who had him lean against the car and
made him open the trunk while they called the car rental agency before letting
him go. “Though I understood that I had no choice but to put up with this
abuse, it was a terrible way to be treated, a humiliating way to feel,” Gossett
wrote in his memoir. “I realized this was happening because I was Black and had
been showing off with a fancy car — which, in their view, I had no right to be
driving.”
After dinner at
the hotel, he went for a walk and was stopped a block away by a police officer,
who told him he broke a law prohibiting walking around residential Beverly
Hills after 9 p.m. Two other officers arrived and Gossett said he was chained
to a tree and handcuffed for three hours. He was eventually freed when the
original police car returned. "Now I had come face-to-face with racism,
and it was an ugly sight,” he wrote. “But it was not going to destroy me.”
In the late 1990s,
Gossett said he was pulled over by police on Pacific Coast Highway while
driving his restored 1986 Rolls Royce Corniche II. The officer told him he
looked like someone they were searching for, but the officer recognized Gossett
and left.
He founded the
Eracism Foundation to help create a world where racism doesn't exist.
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