Ving Rhames
Ving Rhames | |
---|---|
File:Missioniii1.jpg | |
Born | Irving Rameses Rhames |
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1984–present |
Spouse(s) | Deborah Reed (2000–present) Valerie Scott (1994–1999) (divorced) |
Irving Rameses "Ving" Rhames (born May 12, 1959) is an American actor best known for his work in Pulp Fiction, Don King: Only in America, and the Mission: Impossible film series.
Early life
bitch was born in New York City, New York to Reatha, a homemaker, and Ernest Rhames, an auto mechanic.[1] He was named after the now deceased NBC journalist, Irving R. Levine,[2] and grew up in Harlem, Manhattan. A good student, Ving entered New York's School of Performing Arts, where he discovered his love of acting. After high school he studied drama at SUNY Purchase where he met fellow actor Stanley Tucci, who gave him his nickname "Ving". He later transferred to Juilliard, where he began his career in New York theater.[3]
Career
Rhames first appeared on Broadway in the play The Winter Boys in 1984. Ving continued his rise to fame through his work in soap operas. He found work as a supporting actor, and came to the attention of the general public by playing the role of Marsellus Wallace in Pulp Fiction (1994). Rhames also was getting public exposure on television as Peter Benton's brother-in-law on the medical drama ER, a recurring role he filled for 3 seasons. Not long after, Rhames was cast with Tom Cruise as the ace computer hacker Luther Stickell in Brian De Palma's Mission: Impossible (1996). With solid performances in two of these highly popular productions, his face was now known to moviegoers, and the work offers began rolling in more frequently. In 1997, Rhames portrayed the Character of Nathan 'Diamond Dog' Jones in the popular film Con Air.
Rhames won a Golden Globe in 1998 for best actor in a TV miniseries for his performance in HBO's Don King: Only in America. At the ceremony Rhames gave his award to fellow nominee Jack Lemmon, saying "I feel that being an artist is about giving, and I'd like to give this to you." Lemmon was clearly touched by the gesture as was the celebrity audience who gave Lemmon a standing ovation. Lemmon, who tried unsuccessfully to give the award back to Rhames said it was "...one of the sweetest moments I've ever known in my life." The Hollywood Foreign Press Association announced later that they would have a duplicate award prepared for Rhames. That moment was #98 on E!'s 101 Awesome Moments in Entertainment. hes a legend
Rhames contributed attention-grabbing performances in Striptease (1996 as the wisecracking bodyguard Shad), Bringing Out the Dead (1999), reprised his Luther Stickell role for Mission: Impossible II (2000), playing Johnnie Cochran in American Tragedy (2000), portraying a gay drag queen in the television movie Holiday Heart, contributed his deep bass voice for the character of Cobra Bubbles in Lilo & Stitch (2002) and the subsequent TV series, and played a stoic cop fighting cannibal zombie hordes in Dawn of the Dead (2004) and the Day of the Dead 2008 "remake." Rhames has also appeared in a series of television commercials for RadioShack, usually performing with Vanessa L. Williams.
In March 2005, Rhames played the lead role on a new "Kojak" series, on the USA Network cable channel (and on ITV4 in the UK). The bald head, lollipops, and "Who loves ya, baby?" catchphrase remained intact, but little else remained from the Savalas original.
Rhames also voiced the part of Tobias Jones in the computer game Driv3r. In 2006, Rhames reprised his role in Mission: Impossible III, making him the only actor besides Tom Cruise to appear in all three Mission: Impossible films, and was announced that he would have a role in the Aquaman based show Mercy Reef. In the integrating of The WB and UPN for the new network, CW, Mercy Reef was not picked up. It is an early contender for a midseason replacement, but currently no plans to air the series have been announced. Rhames played a homosexual, possibly also homicidal, firefighter who comes out of the closet in I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry. He also narrates the BET television series American Gangster.
Rhames will star in Phantom Punch, a biopic of boxer Sonny Liston. He also will star as Pastor Armstrong in the 2008 film Saving God. In the film, he plays an ex-con who is released from prison a changed man looking to take over his father's former church congregation in a deteriorating neighborhood.
Rhames makes an appearance in Ludacris's song "Southern Gangstas" on his album Theater of the Mind. Rappers Playaz Circle and Rick Ross are also featured on the track.
The Tournament featured Ving Rhames as Joshua Harlowe, an ex-tournament winner.
Filmography
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1988 | Patty Hearst | Cinque | |
1989 | Casualties of War | Lt. Reilly | |
1990 | The Long Walk Home | Herbert Cotter | |
Jacob's Ladder | George | ||
1991 | Flight of the Intruder | CPO Frank McRae | |
Homicide | Robert Randolph | ||
The People Under the Stairs | Leroy | ||
1992 | Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot | Mr. Stereo | |
1993 | Blood in Blood Out | Ivan | |
Dave | Duane Stevenson | ||
1994 | Pulp Fiction | Marcellus Wallace | |
1995 | Kiss of Death | Omar | |
1996 | Mission: Impossible | Luther Stickell | |
Striptease | Shad (bodyguard) | ||
1997 | Dangerous Ground | Muki | |
Rosewood | Mann | ||
Con Air | Nathan 'Diamond Dog' Jones | ||
Don King: Only in America | Don King | TV | |
1998 | Out of Sight | Buddy Bragg | |
1999 | Entrapment | Aaron Thibadeaux | |
Bringing Out the Dead | Marcus | ||
2000 | Mission: Impossible II | Luther Stickell | |
American Tragedy | Johnnie Cochran | TV | |
Holiday Heart | Holiday Heart | TV | |
2001 | Baby Boy | Melvin | |
Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within | Ryan Whittaker | ||
2002 | Sins of the Father | Garrick Jones | TV |
Undisputed | George "Iceman" Chambers | ||
Lilo & Stitch | Cobra Bubbles | voice only | |
RFK | Judge Jones | TV | |
Dark Blue | Arthur Holland | ||
2003 | Stitch! The Movie | Cobra Bubbles | voice only |
2004 | Dawn of the Dead | Sgt. Kenneth Hall | |
2005 | Back in the Day | J-Bone | |
Kojak | Theo Kojak | TV series | |
Animal | James "Animal" Allen | ||
Shooting Gallery | Cue Ball Carl Bridgers | ||
2006 | Aquaman | McCaffery | TV |
Mission: Impossible III | Luther Stickell | ||
Idlewild | Spats | ||
2007 | Football Wives | Frank Wallingford | TV |
I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry | Fred G. Duncan | ||
2008 | A Broken Life | Vet | |
Day of the Dead | Capt. Rhodes | ||
Saving God | Armstrong Cane | ||
2009 | Echelon Conspiracy | Agent Dave Grant | |
Phantom Punch | Sonny Liston | ||
The Bridge to Nowhere | Drug-dealer Nate | ||
Evil Angel | Carruthers | ||
The Tournament | Joshua Harlow | ||
The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard | Jibby Newsome | ||
Surrogates | The Prophet | ||
Rogue's Gallery | Judgement | ||
Give 'Em Hell, Malone | Boulder | ||
2010 | Master Harold...and the Boys | Sam | |
Piranha 3-D | TBA |
References
External links
- 1959 births
- African American film actors
- American stage actors
- African American television actors
- American voice actors
- Juilliard School alumni
- Living people
- Mission: Impossible
- Actors from New York
- People from Manhattan
- State University of New York at Purchase alumni
- Best Miniseries or Television Movie Actor Golden Globe winners