27.10.2004

Julius Harris, pioneering actor

LOS ANGELES - Julius Harris, a stage and screen performer who moved beyond stereotypical movie roles for black actors, died here on Sunday.

He was 81.

The cause was heart failure, a spokesman for the Motion Picture

and Television Hospital said.

 

Harris played the villainous Tee Hee in the James Bond film

'Live and Let Die' and a gangster in the 1972 'Superfly'.

 

Harris, a former member of the Negro Ensemble Company in New

York, played diverse roles in his long acting career.

 

He appeared in more than 70 film and television productions in

roles that included a preacher who headed a slave group in the 1982

Civil War miniseries 'The Blue and the Gray' and President Idi Amin

of Uganda in the television movie 'Victory at Entebbe'.

 

"Even today, if I am walking in a black neighbourhood, people

call me by my 'Superfly' name - Scatter," Harris told The Los

Angeles Times last October before being honoured with a tribute at

the Directors Guild of America Theater.

 

Harris's mother was a Cotton Club dancer, and his father was a

musician.

 

Harris, a Philadelphia native, served as an Army medic during

World War II and found work as an orderly and a nurse after leaving

the service in 1950.

 

He eventually moved to New York, where he landed his first role

as a drunken, defeated father in 'Nothing But A Man', a critically

acclaimed 1964 film about black life in the South starring Ivan

Dixon and Abbey Lincoln.

 

Harris is survived by his children, Kimberly and Gideon.

 

- Nampa-AP

 

The cause was heart failure, a spokesman for the Motion Picture and

Television Hospital said.Harris played the villainous Tee Hee in

the James Bond film 'Live and Let Die' and a gangster in the 1972

'Superfly'.Harris, a former member of the Negro Ensemble Company in

New York, played diverse roles in his long acting career.He

appeared in more than 70 film and television productions in roles

that included a preacher who headed a slave group in the 1982 Civil

War miniseries 'The Blue and the Gray' and President Idi Amin of

Uganda in the television movie 'Victory at Entebbe'."Even today, if

I am walking in a black neighbourhood, people call me by my

'Superfly' name - Scatter," Harris told The Los Angeles Times last

October before being honoured with a tribute at the Directors Guild

of America Theater.Harris's mother was a Cotton Club dancer, and

his father was a musician.Harris, a Philadelphia native, served as

an Army medic during World War II and found work as an orderly and

a nurse after leaving the service in 1950.He eventually moved to

New York, where he landed his first role as a drunken, defeated

father in 'Nothing But A Man', a critically acclaimed 1964 film

about black life in the South starring Ivan Dixon and Abbey

Lincoln.Harris is survived by his children, Kimberly and Gideon.-

Nampa-AP