Richard Wesley(I)
- Writer
- Actor
Richard Wesley was born in Newark, New Jersey on July 11, 1945, the
older of two boys, to George Wesley and Gertrude Thomas Wesley, a
laborer and housewife, respectively. After graduating high school, he
attended Howard University in Washington, DC, where he studied
Playwriting and Dramatic Literature. His mentors there were the Chair
of the Drama Department, Owen Dodson, and his playwriting teacher, Ted
Shine. Howard was an exciting place and fascinating experience for
Wesley. The civil rights movement was capturing the minds of youth
everywhere. Stokely Carmichael was a
junior on campus. John Kennedy was in the White House, only two miles
from the campus. Among Wesley's classmates in the College of Fine Arts
were, Hattie Winston, who would later go
on to star on Broadway and in the TV series
Becker (1998), with
'Ted
Danson';
Donny Hathaway, the late composer and R&B
star; Jessye Norman, the opera and concert
star; and in his senior year, a young freshman who would later be known
to the world as Phylicia Rashad, star of
two Bill Cosby TV series and the first black woman to earn the Tony
Award for Best Actress. Wesley's own promise became apparent early on
when, as a nineteen year-old sophomore, he was awarded an Honorable
Mention in the Samuel French publishing company's then annual National
Collegiate Playwriting Competition. After graduation, Wesley made his
way to New York City. The actors Ossie Davis
and Ruby Dee, whom he had met while an undergraduate at Howard, pointed
him in a direction that eventually led to the New Lafayette Theatre in
Harlem. Wesley joined the writers workshop there, organized by
'Robert Macbeth', the Artistic Director,
and Ed Bullins, the playwright in residence,
and one of the leading voices in the then ascendant Black Theatre
Movement. Four years later, Bullins introduced Wesley to the producer
Joseph Papp who in turn produced Wesley's
first play, The Black Terror, a political drama which was critically
well received and which established Wesley as a prominent voice among a
new generation of playwrights then emerging in New York:
David Rabe, OyamO,
Susan Yankowitz and
David Mamet, among others. A subsequent
off-Broadway drama, The Last Street Play, led to an offer from the
actor Sidney Poitier to develop a
screenplay for a comedy he had in mind.
Uptown Saturday Night (1974),
which also featured Bill Cosby,
'Richard
Pryor',
Flip Wilson and Paula Kelly, was the result.
The movie was a box office winner and led to a second film,
Let's Do It Again (1975) with
Poitier, Cosby, John Amos,
Denise Nicholas and
Ossie Davis in its cast. This movie was also
a major success. The ensuing years found Wesley actively working on
stage and in film and television. Two more features in the 80s,
Native Son (1986), the adaptation of
Richard Wright's famous novel, and Fast Forward, a movie musical
directed by Sidney Poitier. Wesley also penned a children's film for
PBS entitled
The House of Dies Drear (1984),
an adaptation of a Virginia Hamilton book for children. On stage, he
was involved in the musical, The Dream Team, for the Goodspeed Opera
House, then a new drama, The Talented Tenth, at the Manhattan Theatre
Club. In the nineties, he worked primarily penning scripts for
television movies: Murder Without Motive (NBC),
Mandela and de Klerk (1997)
(Showtime), _Bojangles_ (Showtime) and
Deacons for Defense (2003)
(Showtime). He also penned episodes for the
Sidney Lumet drama series
100 Centre Street (2001),
on the A&E cable network. Still a working professional, Wesley is also
currently the Associate Chair of the Goldberg Department of Dramatic
Writing in the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University.