DON CHEADLE

ALL ABOUT DON CHEADLE
Full Name: Donald Frank Cheadle
Date of Birth: 29 November 1964
Place of Birth: Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Family: Daughters - Ayana Tai, born 1994; Imani, born 1996 (mother: Coulter), Brother - Colin Cheadle, Father - Donald Cheadle, Mother - Betty Cheadle, Sister - Cindy Cheadle. teacher
Bio:
Despite being engaging, articulate and immensely talented, actor Don Cheadle spent several years making thankless guest appearances on TV dramas (”Hill Street Blues”, “China Beach”) and sitcoms (”Night Court”, “Fresh Prince of Bel-Air”) before landing a berth as the fastidious hotel manager of “The Golden Palace” (1992-93), the CBS sitcom spin-off from the successful “Golden Girls.” Largely chameleon-like throughout his career, Cheadle broke out with a critically acclaimed performance in Carl Franklin’s crime thriller, “Devil in a Blue Dress” (1995). He began garnering larger and more prominent roles, including a fine turn as a down-and-out porn actor in “Boogie Nights” (1997) and a ruthless, but charming ex-con in “Out of Sight” (1998). While still confined to co-starring appearances, Cheadle always managed to garner notice, thanks in large part to his ability to add something extra to otherwise routine characters. But it was his performance as real-life hotel manager Paul Rusesabagina in “Hotel Rwanda” (2004) that earned Cheadle widespread recognition thanks to his first Academy Award nomination for Best Leading Actor. Being one of Danny Ocean’s 11 in the hit remake of the Rat Pack film, “Ocean’s Eleven” (2001) only added to his A-list luster as one of the most respected actors working in Hollywood.
Cheadle was born on November 29, 1964 in Kansas City, MO, but was raised in Lincoln, NE and Denver, CO. His father, Donald, was a child psychologist and his mother, Betty, was a bank manager, providing the Cheadle brood with a comfortable upbringing. Catching the acting bug at 10 years old, the fledgling actor took drama classes at East High School in Denver, before further developing his craft at the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, CA. While he was earning his Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theater, Cheadle began a recurring role on the hit show “Fame” (NBC, 1982-87). Following his graduation, he made his feature film debut in a bit part in the urban comedy, “Moving Violations” (1985). After a turn as an Army private in John Irvin’s grim anti-war drama “Hamburger Hill” (1987) – a true story about the bloody Vietnam battle for Hill 937 that resulted in a hollow American victory – he landed a pivotal turn as a volatile gang leader in the inner city drama, “Colors” (1988).
After small roles in “Roadside Prophets” (1992) and “The Meteor Man” (1993), Cheadle was tapped by Carl Franklin for a star-making turn in the director’s deft neo-noir, “Devil in a Blue Dress” (1995). As Mouse, a trigger-happy old acquaintance of detective Easy Rawlings (Denzel Washington), Cheadle stole every scene, winning awards from critics’ groups – though an expected Oscar nod failed to materialize. Cheadle went on to deliver strong performances in several higher-profile features, playing a Harlem basketball star who career is sidelined by drugs in “Rebound: The Legend of Earl ‘The Goat’ Manigault” (HBO, 1996); the town resident willing to stand his ground against racists in the underrated “Rosewood” (1997); and a porn star with dreams of owning a stereo equipment store in Paul Thomas Anderson’s excellent “Boogie Nights.” He ripped the acting rug out from under his co-star and director, Warren Beatty, in “Bulworth” (1998), playing a Rolaids-popping entrepreneurial gang leader out to get a delirious senator (Betty) trying to win reelection while suffering a nervous breakdown. Cheadle was both deftly comic and chillingly ruthless opposite George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez as cunning ex-con Maurice ‘Snoopy’ Miller in director Steven Soderbergh’s stylish and sexy crime caper, “Out of Sight,” widely considered to be the first successful adaptation of an Elmore Leonard novel.
On a role, Cheadle next earned kudos – and Emmy nods – for his depiction of Sammy Davis Jr. in the 1998 HBO biopic, “The Rat Pack” and for playing a teacher attempting to reach a death row prisoner in the beautifully realized “A Lesson Before Dying” (HBO, 1999). In 2000, after supporting roles in “Mission to Mars” and “The Family Man,” Cheadle reunited with Soderbergh to play vice cop Montel Gordon in the multi-plot, Academy Award-winning drug opus, “Traffic” – a stunning film that told three parallel stories depicting various aspects of America’s failed war on drugs.
After being cast by Clooney for the live broadcast of “Fail Safe,” Cheadle appeared in the all-star ensemble of Soderbergh’s blockbuster remake “Ocean’s Eleven” (2001), playing the over-the-top, Cockney thief Basher Tarr. He made thankless supporting stints in “Swordfish” and “Rush Hour 2″ in 2001, before appearing in a four-episode guest shot on the hit NBC medical drama “ER” in 2002 – starring as Paul Nathan, an idealistic, late-blooming medical student who insists on completing a surgical internship even though he suffers from occasionally debilitating Parkinson’s disease. In the indie film “The United States of Leland” (2003), Cheadle portrayed aspiring writer and prison teacher Pearl Madison, enthralled by the murderous history of a soft-spoken young man. In the diverting caper, “After the Sunset” (2004), he was an American expatriate turned Caribbean vice king trying to employ retired thief Pierce Brosnan to help bring vice to the underprivileged masses.
After a second, disappointing go-round with Clooney and company in “Ocean’s Twelve” (2004), Cheadle moved center stage and received the best reviews of his career when he starred in “Hotel Rwanda” (2004) as real-life hotel manager Paul Rusesabagina – a man who saved the lives of 1,200 Rwandans during a tribal massacre in 1994. The actor created a character that was noble, resourceful and crafty, yet he balanced his performance with the right amount of fear and concern. His powerful turn stood on the top of what most critics listed as one of the best performances of 2004. Driving home that point, Cheadle earned nominations for a Golden Globe and an Oscar for Best Actor. On the heels of that triumph, he also delivered a well-etched supporting performance as the hardworking but struggling mechanic Bonny – one of Sean Penn’s few remaining friends – in the alienation drama, “The Assassination of Richard Nixon” (2004).
In yet another Oscar-worthy performance, he was at the center of the top-flight acting ensemble of the thought-provoking, multi-plot drama “Crash” (2005), starring as a Los Angeles police detective contending with various issues of racial prejudice. Cheadle also served as a producer on the film and recruited many members of the cast – which helped lead the film to win the Best Motion Picture Oscar that year. At the same time the film was cleaning up at awards shows, Cheadle was locked in to serve as a co-executive producer of a television version of “Crash,” also written and directed by the film’s director, Paul Haggis. Prior to filming the pilot, Cheadle was considering joining the cast and directing a few episodes. Turning instead to his activist side, Cheadle narrated the documentary “King Leopold’s Ghost” (2006) – a look at the exploitation of the Congo by Belgium’s King Leopold II from 1885-1908. As the sole owner of the corporate Congo Free State, Leopold enslaved millions of Africans and perpetrated a genocide that claimed upwards of 10 million people in his extraction of rubber and ivory. Cheadle then costarred opposite Adam Sandler in “Reign Over Me” (2007), playing Alan, a successful dentist – complete with a beautiful wife (Jada Pinkett-Smith) and children – who runs into his former college roommate, Charlie (Sandler), and is shocked to see his once-gregarious friend sad and depressed. He learns that Charlie lost his family on 9/11 and hasn’t been the same since, while Alan has been overwhelmed by his life’s responsibilities. Meanwhile, Cheadle reprised Basher Tarr for “Ocean’s 13” (2007), a vast improvement over the first sequel that depicted the happy-go-lucky thieves looking for revenge against a ruthless Las Vegas casino owner (Al Pacino).
Trivia:
Don graduated at the California Institute of the Arts.
Got his first big break starring as the hotel clerk on the short lived Golden Girls spin off The Golden Palace alongside Cheech Marin.
He drives a hybrid car, a Toyota Prius.
After acting in Hotel Rwanda (2004), a film about the early 1990s Rwandan genocide, he became an activist to raise awareness of the mid-2000s genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan.
He briefly worked as a stand-up comic early in his career.
He plays the saxophone.
He acted in Rosewood (1997) where his wife was played by Bridgid Coulter, his longtime girlfriend and mother of his two daughters.
Quotes:
“I’ve been doing this since I was 10 years old, inhabiting different people and playing different roles. Thirty years later, there’s still the same sort of excitement I get from it. It’s still fun to inhabit different characters and play different things, so it’s all in that panoply of acting.”
“But I don’t think it helps to be thought of as a scene-stealer. That’s not comforting for the other actors. They think, ‘Well, I don’t want to work with him. Go steal from someone else.’ So I’m never going into a movie thinking that I want to grab the attention. Quite the opposite: I give that stuff away, because I’m wanting to make the best whole piece. I want to look back at my resume and think, ‘That was a great movie,’ not, ‘Oh, those four movies were shit, but I was good in them.’ I want to be a part of great things.”
“I also believe that you are what you have to defend, and if you’re a black man that’s always going to be the bar against which you are judged, whether you want to align yourself with those themes or not. You can think of yourself as a colourless person, but nobody else is gonna.”
Filmography:
Don Cheadle Filmography as an Actor:
2010 Marching Powder
2009 Toussaint
2009 Brooklyn’s Finest
2008 Tishomingo Blues
2008 Hotel for Dogs
2008 Traitor
2007 Darfur Now
2007 Talk to Me
2007 Ocean’s Thirteen
2007 Reign Over Me
2006 The Dog Problem
2006 King Leopold’s Ghost
2005 Other Side of Simple
2005 Crash
2004 The Assassination of Richard Nixon
2004 After the Sunset
2004 Ocean’s Twelve
2004 Hotel Rwanda
2002 ER: First Snowfall
2002 ER: One Can Only Hope
2002 Independent Lens [TV Series]
2002 Unchained Memories: Readings from the Slave Narratives
2002 ER: Tell Me Where It Hurts
2002 ER: A Hopeless Wound
2002 The United States of Leland
2001 Swordfish
2001 Manic
2001 Ocean’s Eleven
2001 Things Behind the Sun
2000 The Family Man
2000 Mission to Mars
2000 Traffic
2000 Fail Safe
1999 A Lesson Before Dying
1998 The Rat Pack
1998 Out of Sight
1998 Bulworth
1997 Boogie Nights
1997 Rosewood
1997 Volcano
1996 Rebound: The Legend of Earl “The Goat” Manigault
1995 Things to Do in Denver When You’re Dead
1995 Devil in a Blue Dress
1993 The Meteor Man
1992 Roadside Prophets
1990 The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air: Homeboy, Sweet Homeboy
1988 Colors
1988 Night Court: Jung and the Restless
1987 Hamburger Hill
1985 Moving Violations
Don Cheadle Filmography as a Director:
2008 Tishomingo Blues
Don Cheadle Filmography as an Executive Producer:
2007 Talk to Me
Don Cheadle Filmography as a Producer:
2008 Traitor
2007 Darfur Now
2005 Crash
Don Cheadle Awards:
Academy
2004 Best Actor Hotel Rwanda
British Academy Awards
2005 Best Supporting Actor Crash
Broadcast Film Critics Association
2004 Best Actor Hotel Rwanda
Golden Globe
2004 Best Actor - Drama Hotel Rwanda
Independent Spirit Award
2001 Best Supporting Actor Things Behind the Sun
L.A. Film Critics Association
1994 Best Supporting Actor Devil in a Blue Dress
London Film Critics Association
2005 Best Actor Hotel Rwanda
2005 Best Actor Crash
National Society of Film Critics
1995 Best Supporting Actor Devil in a Blue Dress
Screen Actors Guild
2005 Best Supporting Actor Crash
2004 Best Actor Hotel Rwanda
1995 Best Supporting Actor Devil in a Blue Dress
Leave a comment