Leigh Whipper(1876-1975)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
Leigh Whipper was an consummate actor who led an impressive life. Born
in South Carolina in 1876, at the end of the Reconstruction Era in
which his parents had participated, he was educated in Washington,
D.C., attending Howard University, before turning permanently to a life
in the theater. At a time when work for black actors was limited,
Whipper became a successful actor, appearing in more than twenty plays
and a greater number of films. He not only joined Actors Equity in 1913
and other organizations where African-Americans were few in number, but
he also helped fellow African-American thespians by founding the Negro
Actors Guild in 1937. His first great success was as The Crab Man in
"Porgy" on the stage in 1927-1928 and 1929. His work also included
radio and television. He appeared in his first movie in 1920, but his
most prolific period of movie making was between the years 1939 and
1947 when he made twenty films, though sometimes he received no screen
credit. His performance as Crooks in "Of Mice and Men" (1939), which
reprised his Broadway role, is remarkably powerful and natural at a
time when roles for African-Americans often required them to compromise
their dignity by playing caricatures. In 1944, Whipper received a
special honor from the Ethiopian government for his portrayal of
Emperor Haile Selassie. He retired in 1972 and died three months before
his 99th birthday in 1975.