Woody Strode

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Woody Strode bigraphy, stories - American football player and actor

Woody Strode : biography

July 28, 1914 – December 31, 1994

Woodrow Wilson Woolwine "Woody" Strode (July 25, 1914December 31, 1994) was a decathlete and football star who went on to become a pioneering African American film actor. He was nominated for a Golden Globe award for Best Supporting Actor for his role in Spartacus in 1960. He served in the US Army during World War II.

Death

Strode died of lung cancer on December 31, 1994, in Glendora, California, aged 80. He is buried at Riverside National Cemetery in Riverside, California.

Toy Story

Main character Sheriff Woody of the Toy Story animated movies by Pixar is named after Strode.

Author

  • Strode wrote an autobiography entitled Goal Dust (ISBN 0-8191-7680-X).

Acting career

As an actor, the 6′ 4" (1.93 m) Strode was noted for film roles that contrasted with the stereotypes of the time. He is probably best remembered for his brief Golden Globe-nominated role in Spartacus (1960) as the Ethiopian gladiator Draba, in which he fights Kirk Douglas to the death.

Strode made his screen debut in 1941 in Sundown, but became more active in the 1950s, eventually in roles of increasing depth. He played an African warrior in The Lion Hunters in Monogram’s Bomba the Jungle Boy series in 1951. Also, he appeared in several episodes of the 1952-54 television series "Ramar of the Jungle", where he portrayed an African warrior. He played dual roles (billed as "Woodrow Strode") in The Ten Commandments (1956) as an Ethiopian king as well as a slave, and in 1959 portrayed the cowardly Private Franklin in Pork Chop Hill. He appeared once on Johnny Weismuller’s 1955-1956 syndicated television series Jungle Jim.

He became a close friend of director John Ford, who gave him the title role in Sergeant Rutledge (1960) as a member of the Ninth Cavalry falsely accused of rape and murder; he appeared in smaller roles in Ford’s later films Two Rode Together (1961), The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962) and Seven Women (1966). Strode was very close to the director. During Ford’s declining years, Strode once spent four months sleeping on the director’s floor as his caretaker, and he was later present at Ford’s death.Woody Strode, Goal Dust, Madison Books, 1990, ISBN 0-8191-7680-X, pp. 215-218, 249

Strode played memorable villains opposite three screen Tarzans. In 1958, he appeared as Ramo opposite Gordon Scott in Tarzan’s Fight for Life. In 1963, he was cast opposite Jock Mahoney’s Tarzan as both the dying leader of an unnamed Asian country and that leader’s unsavory brother, Khan, in Tarzan’s Three Challenges. In the late 1960s, he appeared in several episodes of the Ron Ely Tarzan television series.

Strode’s other television work included a role as the Grand Mogul, in the Batman episodes "Marsha, Queen of Diamonds" and "Marsha’s Scheme of Diamonds" Strode appeared in the third season of the Daniel Boone television series as the slave/wrestler Goliath in the episode of the same name.

Strode played a heroic sailor on a sinking ship in the 1960 film The Last Voyage. In 1966, he landed a major starring role in The Professionals, a major box-office success which established him as a recognizable star. Another notable part was as a gunslinger in the opening sequence of Sergio Leone’s Once Upon a Time in the West (1968); after this, he appeared in several other spaghetti Westerns of lesser quality. His starring role as a thinly disguised Patrice Lumumba in Seduto alla sua destra (released in the U.S. as Black Jesus) garnered Strode a great deal of press at the time, but the film is largely forgotten now. He remained a visible character actor throughout the ’70s and ’80s in such films as Scream (1981), and has become widely regarded (along with Sidney Poitier and Brock Peters) as one of the most important black film actors of his time. His last film was The Quick and the Dead (1995).