
JULY 22

Danny Glover
Born July 22, 1946, in San Francisco, California
Danny
Glover
American actor, film director, and political
activist.
Original Name - Danny Lebern Glover
Early life
Glover was born in San Francisco, California, the
son of Carrie (née Hunley) and James Glover,
both of whom were postal workers and were active
in the NAACP. Glover grew up with a love for
sports just like his father. Glover's mother,
daughter of a midwife, was born in Louisville,
Georgia and graduated from Paine College. Glover
graduated from George Washington High School (San
Francisco) before attending American University
and matriculating at San Francisco State
University. At university, he also met his future
wife Asake Bomani, whom he married in 1975. They
have been divorced for some time now.
In his late twenties, Glover enrolled in the
Black Actors Workshop at the American
Conservatory Theater, a regional training program
in San Francisco. Glover also trained with Jean
Shelton at the Shelton Actors Lab in San
Francisco. In an interview on Inside the Actor's
Studio, Glover credited Shelton for much of his
development as an actor. Deciding that he wanted
to be an actor, Glover resigned from his city
administration job and soon began his career as a
stage actor, which eventually brought him to Los
Angeles.
Glover suffered from epilepsy as a teenager and
young adult; according to his own account, he
"developed a way of concentrating so that
seizures wouldn't happen." Using this
technique, which he describes as a type of
self-hypnosis, Glover says he hasn't suffered a
seizure since the age of 35.
Career
He has had a variety of film, stage, and
television roles, and is best known for playing
Los Angeles police Sgt. Roger Murtaugh in the
Lethal Weapon series of action films, and the
abusive husband to Whoopi Goldberg's character
Celie in The Color Purple. He was given top
billing for the first time in Predator 2, the
sequel to the sci-fi actioner Predator. In
addition, Glover has been a voice actor in many
children's movies. Among many awards, he has won
five NAACP Image Awards, for his achievements as
an actor of color . Danny Glover also worked in
2001 blockbuster Royal Tenenbaums also starring
Gywneth Paltrow, Anjelica Huston, Ben Stiller and
Owen Wilson.
He joined the ranks of actors, such as Humphrey
Bogart, Elliott Gould, and Robert Mitchum, who
have portrayed Raymond Chandler's private eye
detective Philip Marlowe in the episode 'Red
Wind' of the Showtime network's 1995 series
Fallen Angels. Glover made his directorial debut
with the Showtime channel short film Override in
1994. Also in 1994, Glover and actor Ben Guillory
formed the Robey Theatre Company in Los Angeles,
focusing on theatre by and about the Black
experience.
In 2005, Glover and Joslyn Barnes announced plans
to make "No FEAR," a movie about Dr.
Marsha Coleman-Adebayo's experience.
Coleman-Adebayo won a 2000 jury trial against the
US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The
jury found the EPA guilty of violating the civil
rights of Coleman-Adebayo on the basis of race,
sex, color and a hostile work environment, under
the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Coleman-Adebayo was
terminated shortly after she revealed the
environmental and human disaster taking place in
the Brits, South Africa, vanadium mines. Her
experience inspired passage of the No FEAR Act.
In May 2007, it was announced that the Venezuelan
Government would give Glover $18 million to make
a film version of the 18th-century Haiti slave
uprising that was led by Toussaint Louverture.
The Asociación Nacional de Autores
Cinematográficos (ANAC) and several prominent
Venezuelan filmmakers such as Solveig
Hoogesteijn, Jonathan Jakubowicz, Franco de Peña
and José Ramón Novoa criticized such large
investment in Glover's movie since the same
amount of money is equivalent to the budget for 4
years given by the Venezuelan government to the
National Film Board of Venezuela (CNAC) and could
could support the production of over 34
Venezuelan films. An additional $9.840.505 was
approved by the Venezuelan National Assembly in
April of 2008.
Glover is known for saying "I'm too old for
this shit!" in multiple films
Activism
Glover speaks at a March for Immigrants Rights in
Madison, Wisconsin.While attending San Francisco
State University, Glover was a member of the
Black Students Union who along with the Third
World Liberation Front led the five month strike
for Ethnic Studies. Not only did this help to
create the first school of Ethnic Studies in the
U.S., but it was also the longest student strike
in the history of the United States. During the
strike, he protested alongside Hari Dillon who is
now the president of the Vanguard Public
Foundation, of which Glover sits on the advisory
board.
Glover serves as a board member to numerous
national and international organizations. He is
presently chair of the TransAfrica Forum, "a
non-profit organization dedicated to educating
the general public particularly
African-Americans on the economic,
political and moral ramifications of U.S. foreign
policy as it affects Africa and the Diaspora in
the Caribbean and Latin America" and a board
member of Cheryl Byron's Something Positive Dance
Group. In March 1998, he was appointed ambassador
to the United Nations Development Programme.
Glover is among a number of high-profile U.S.
supporters of Venezuelan president Hugo Chávez.
The group also includes singer Harry Belafonte
and Princeton University scholar Cornel West, who
have sided with the Venezuelan president against
accusations of democratic abuses.
Between 2007 and 2008, Glover has received loans
close to U.S. $28 million from the Venezuelan
government to make a film based on the life of
François Dominique Toussaint-Louverture, an
Haitian freedom fighter.
He also serves on the Advisory Council for
TeleSUR, "Television of the South", a
pan-Latin American television network based in
Caracas, financed by the Venezuelan government.
It began broadcasting on July 24, 2005. His role
in this capacity and his resulting interaction
with Chávez have drawn criticism for Glover from
some Western media.
On Friday May 4, 2007 Glover endorsed former
Senator John Edwards for the Democratic
nomination for President in the 2008 Presidential
Race. After Edwards withdrew from the race,
Glover endorsed Barack Obama.
On January 24, 2008, he was convicted of
trespassing during a union rally at a Sheraton
Hotel in Niagara Falls, Ontario. He was convicted
along with union representative Alex Dagg and
Ontario Federation of Labour president Wayne
Samuelson. Although Canadian Niagara Hotels were
seeking $22,000 in a private prosecution, Glover,
Dagg and Samuelson were sentenced with a $100
fine on February 8, 2008. The justice of the
peace suggested that "the prosecution was
unnecessary to protect the interests of the
hotel's owner, and that the company should have
put more effort toward good faith negotiations
with the union".
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