Place of Birth:
Queens, New York City, New York, USA
Date of Birth:
12/1/1951
Obba Babatundé (born December 1, 1951) is an American actor of stage and screen, known for his Emmy-nominated performance in the television movie Miss Evers' Boys, a NAACP Image Award-nominated performance in the TV movie Introducing Dorothy Dandridge, and a Tony Award-nominated role for his performance as C.C. White in the original cast of the 1981 Broadway musical Dreamgirls. Babatundé was a protege of Sammy Davis, Jr., who said of him, "This is the only cat who can do everything I can do." Babatundé does dance, sing, play instruments, execute impersonations, including his portrayal of Davis, aided by their similarity in energy, size and talent, tap dancing and performing on multiple instruments. In fall 2009, Babatundé played Davis in the title role of "Sammy: Once in a Lifetime," a world premiere musical at the Old Globe Theatre in San Diego. Early in 2000, Babatundé partnered with writer/producer Ruth Adkins Robinson for a series of TV projects including "TV in Black: The First 50 Years," "Oscar's Black Odyssey: From Hattie to Hallie" and "Dorthy Dandridge: An American Beauty". The pair have projects that will take them through 2011. His TV roles have often portrayed authority figures, such as a recurring guest-starring role as a high school principal on Dawson's Creek, an appearance as a judge in a two-part episode of Any Day Now, and as the father of the main characters on Half & Half. He also played Harvard college Dean Cain in the movie How High, as well as the role of Willie Long in the movie Life, and co-starred as an attorney in Philadelphia and as a senator in the 2004 reprise of The Manchurian Candidate. He also played the director in season 3 of Friends in an episode titled "The One with All the Jealousy". Other TV shows he has had recurring roles on include The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, Chicago Hope, Rocket Power, Static Shock, and Karen Sisco. He played a small but pivotal role as a doorman/bellhop in the film That Thing You Do! and also appeared in The Wild Thornberrys Movie as the voice of Boko. He played a famous producer known as Gordy Berry on two episodes of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. In the 1998 miniseries, The Temptations, he played the founder of Motown Records Berry Gordy. Babatundé is adept at American sign language and had used this talent in many roles including on one NYPD Blue. His recorded work includes a performance with the New York pianist Onaje Allan Gumbs on the 2007 album Sack Full of Dreams. The actor/producer is also an avid horseman and is a highly regarded rider and trainer in the Rodeo Circuit, including the annual Bill Pickett Rodeol. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Silence of the Lambs
After the Sunset
Material Girls
Life
How High
The Eye
Multiplicity
Undercover Blues
City of Lies
The Manchurian Candidate
Miami Blues
I Do... I Did!
Start Without Me
The Millennial
Soul of the Game
Introducing Dorothy Dandridge
Trapped: Haitian Nights
One Special Moment
God Bless the Child
Joy Road
Miss Evers' Boys
King: Man of Peace in a Time of War
Dolls of Voodoo
Leonard Part 6
Philadelphia
Fatal Pursuit
Black Dynamite
The Temptations Le film de leur ascension vers la gloire
That Thing You Do!
Pup Star: Better 2Gether
Pup Star
Noble Intentions
The Notebook
American Bad Boy
Born to Be Wild
The Cherokee Kid
The Last Fall
The Trap Door
Death's Door
Scooby-Doo! Music of the Vampire
People Not Places
Necronomicon
Santa Paws 2: The Santa Pups
The Importance of Being Earnest
Redeemer
The Watcher
The Tomorrow Man
The Visit
TV in Black: The First Fifty Years
Cover
Kangaroo Jack: G'Day, U.S.A.!
Children of the Dead (Concept Trailer)
If I Tell You I Have to Kill You
Baryshnikov on Broadway
Kinky
Married to the Mob
Jingle Belle
Hollywood Singing and Dancing: A Musical History
Revival!
Lap Dance
Dorothy Dandridge: An American Beauty
The Apartment Complex
All Star Superman
'Til Death Do Us Part
Treemonisha
The Celestine Prophecy
M.A.N.T.I.S.
Trigger
April Fools
John Q
Carpool
An Evening with Liza Minnelli
The Net