'Charles S. Dutton' (born
January 30 1951) is a
Tony Award-nominated and
Emmy Award-winning American actor and director.
Biography
Career
In 1984, Dutton made his
Broadway debut in
August Wilson's ''
Ma Rainey's Black Bottom'', winning a
Theatre World Award and a
Tony Award nomination for Best Actor. In 1988 Dutton played a killer in the television miniseries ''
The Murder of Mary Phagan'' opposite
Jack Lemmon and
Kevin Spacey. 1990 brought him a second Best Actor Tony nomination for his role in another Wilson play, ''
The Piano Lesson''. Dutton also starred in ''
Alien³'', the debut film of director
David Fincher then costarted in 1993's
Rudy.
Dutton won Outstanding Guest Actor
Emmy awards in 2002 and 2003 for his roles in ''
The Practice'' and ''
Without a Trace''. In 1999, he starred in an ensemble cast in ''. He co-starred with
Tom Skerritt. Dutton gained acclaim for his show ''
Roc'' shown on
FOX television from 1991 to 1994, especially mid-run when the show was broadcast live. His work in this role won him an
NAACP Image Award. He co-starred in the popular but short-lived 2005
CBS science fiction series, ''
Threshold''.
In 2000, Dutton directed the critically acclaimed HBO mini series ''
The Corner''. The miniseries was close to his heart for Dutton grew up on the streets of East Baltimore. It was adapted from ''The Corner: A Year in the Life of an Inner-City Neighborhood'' (Broadway Books, 1997) by
David Simon (a reporter for the Baltimore Sun) and
Ed Burns (a retired Baltimore homicide detective). ''The Corner'' won several Emmys in 2000, including that for best miniseries. Dutton won for his direction of the miniseries.
He starred as
Montgomery County, Maryland Police Chief
Charles Moose in the 2003 made-for-TV movie '', and appears in Season 2 of ''
The L Word''. Dutton also appeared in an episode of ''
The Sopranos''. He most recently guest starred on ''
House'' as the father of Doctor
Eric Foreman (
Omar Epps) and on ''
Sleeper Cell: American Terror'' as the father of undercover FBI agent
Darwyn Al-Sayeed. He also directed two episodes of ''Sleeper Cell''.
Personal life
Dutton was born in
Baltimore, Maryland to a truck driver father.
[1] He turned his life around after serving time in
prison for fatally stabbing a man in a street fight. While incarcerated, he discovered a love of the theater and studied for a college degree and later earned a master's degree in acting from the
Yale School of Drama.
Dutton owns a farm in
Ellicott City, Maryland, and is an ex-husband of actress
Debbi Morgan.
References
1. http://www.filmreference.com/film/17/Charles-S-Dutton.html
External links
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