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Look in this gallery the famous people who died in 2022 →
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Sidney Poitier, the first black actor to win an Oscar, died at 94 on January 7.
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Director Peter Bogdanovich died on January 6 in Los Angeles.
He was 82 years old.
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Kim Mi-soo, a South Korean actress who appeared on the Disney + series "Snowdrop" and Netflix's "Hellbound," died at age 29 on January 5.
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French TV star Igor Bogdanoff died of COVID-19 on January 4, six days after his twin brother Grichka passed away from the same cause.
(CNN) ––
These are the main facts of the life of Sidney Poitier, award-winning actor and civil rights activist.
Sidney Poitier, Hollywood star and activist, dies at 94
Personal
Date of birth:
February 20, 1927
Place of birth:
Miami, Florida
Birth name:
Sidney Poitier
Father:
Reginald Poitier, tomato grower
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Mother:
Evelyn (Outten) Poitier
Marriages
: Joanna Shimkus (January 23, 1976-until her death);
Juanita Marie Hardy (from April 29, 1950 to July 9, 1965, divorce)
Children:
with Joanna Shimkus: Sydney and Anika;
with Juanita Marie Hardy: Gina, Sherri, Pamela and Beverly
Other data
Nominated for two Academy Awards, he won one of them.
He also received an honorary Oscar award.
Nominated for two Grammy Awards, he won one of them.
Nominated for two Emmy Awards.
Sidney Poitier grew up on Cat Island in the Bahamas.
The family later moved to Nassau, but his parents sent him to live with relatives in Miami at age 14.
After an encounter with the Ku Klux Klan, he left Miami at 16 and moved to New York.
After lying about his age, he joined the Army at 16.
He pretended to be insane in order to get discharged after nine months, and later admitted to deception in his book
The Measure of a Man: A Spiritual Autobiography
.
A heavy Bahamian accent and limited reading ability cost him an acting job at the American Negro Theater in Harlem.
He overcame his accent by imitating radio announcers and improved his reading skills by studying newspapers.
He had dual citizenship in the United States and the Bahamas.
Poitier was the first black American to win the Oscar for best actor, in 1964, for his role in "Lilies of the Field."
Chronology
1946 –– The first audition after neutralizing his accent leads him to win the role of understudy for Harry Belafonte on
Days of Our Youth.
1950 –– Film debut in
No Way Out
.
1959 –– First black American to receive an Oscar nomination for best actor for
The Defiant Ones
.
August 28, 1963 –– Was one of many Hollywood celebrities who attended the March on Washington.
1964 –– Wins the Academy Award for Best Actor for
Lilies of the Field
.
He is the first black American to win this accolade and the second to win an Oscar.
Hattie McDaniel was the first to win the Best Supporting Actress award for
Gone with the Wind.
1967 –– Starred in three of the highest grossing films of the year,
In the Heat of the Night
,
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner
and
To Sir, with Love
.
Sidney Poitier, with Rod Steiger, in a scene from 1967's "In the Heat of the Night."
August 14, 1967 –– Keynote speaker at the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Atlanta.
1980 –– His autobiography
This Life is published.
1983 –– 19-year-old David Hampton pretends to be Poitier's son and convinces wealthy New Yorkers to provide him with food, clothing, money and a place to stay.
Hampton is charged with grand theft when his lies are discovered.
"Six Degrees of Separation", a play in 1990 and a movie in 1993, is based on this story.
1995 –– Receives honors from the Kennedy Center.
1997-2007 –– Serves as Ambassador of the Bahamas to Japan.
2000 –– He publishes his second autobiography,
The Measure of a Man: A Spiritual Autobiography
February 21, 2001 –– Wins Grammy Award for Best Talking Album for
The Measure Of A Man
.
2002 –– Receives an honorary Academy Award "in recognition of his remarkable accomplishments as an artist and as a human being."
2006 –– Receives the Marian Anderson Award in recognition of his humanitarian and diplomatic work and the Cunard Britannia Award for a Lifetime Contribution to International Film from the British Academy of Film and Television.
2008 –– Publishes
Life Beyond Measure: Letters to My Great-Granddaughter
.
July 30, 2009 –– President Barack Obama presents him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom.
May 7, 2013 –– His science fiction book,
Montaro Caine
, is published .
February 14, 2016 –– Poitier receives a scholarship from the British Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Television, its highest honor.
January 25, 2021 –– Arizona State University announces that it has changed the name of its film school to the Sidney Poitier New American Film School in honor of Poitier's legacy.
Sidney Poitier