Bill Duke- Biography

Also Credited As:

William Duke, William Henry Duke

About Bill Duke

Duke began his film acting career in Michael Schultz's boisterous comedy "Car Wash" (1976), shortly after he started writing for the TV series "Good Times". A prolific TV director with scores of primetime episodes to his credit, including "Knots Landing", "Falcon Crest," "Hill Street Blues", "Spenser: For Hire," "A Man Called Hawk," "City of Angels," "New York Undercover" and the miniseries "Miracle's Boys," he won acclaim for his award-winning PBS film "The Killing Floor" (1984), about WWI stockyard workers, and "The Meeting" (1989), about a hypothetical encounter between Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X.

Duke's first theatrical feature, "A Rage in Harlem" (1991), based on a Chester Himes crime novel, was selected as an official entry in competition at the 1991 Cannes Film Festival. As an actor, he has turned in memorable performances as the villainous gay pimp in "American Gigolo" (1980), Arnold Schwarzenegger's comrade in "Commando" (1985) and "Predator" (1987), and the heavy in "Bird on a Wire" (1990). As his film credits--when not playing bad guys Duke specialized in menacing law enforcement agents--seemed to multiply exponentially, some of the more memorable films on his resume included "Menace II Society" (1993), "Payback" (1999), "The Limey" (1999), "Exit Wounds" (2001) and "Red Dragon" (2002). Duke also began reappearing on the small screen, playing Carla Gugino's colleague Amos Andrews in the critically beloved but short-lived ABC series "Karen Sisco" (2004) based on the Elmore Leonard character from the 1998 film "Out of Sight," and a recurring role as Capt. Bob Parish on the slick MTV-style NBC cop drama "Fastlane" (2002-2003), a series which he also directed. Duke got one of his larger roles as the drug kingpin Levar in director Jim Sheridan's urban drama "Get Rich Or Die Tryin'" (2005) based on the real life of star Curtis "50 Cent" Johnson.

Family

Father

William Duke.

Mother

Ethel Duke.

Education

AFI Conservatory, Los Angeles , California

New York University, New York , New York

Boston University, Boston , Massachusetts

Career Milestones

2008

Directed the thriller "Cover"

2005

Cast in Jim Sheridan's urban drama "Get Rich or Die Tryin'"; loosely based on the life of rapper 50 cent

2003

Cast as Amos Andrews in the NBC series "Karen Sisco" based on the feature "Out of Sight"

2001

Co-starred in "Exit Wounds"

2000

Helmed episodes of the CBS medical drama "City of Angels"

2000

Directed the A&E TV-movie "Golden Spiders"

1999

Played a corrupt Chicago detective in "Payback"

1998

Helmed a two-part story arc of the UPN drama "Legacy"

1997

Directed (executive produced) the under-appreciated gangster flick "Hoodlum"

1993

Helmed "The Cemetery Club"

1991

Directed first feature, "A Rage in Harlem"

1984

Directed "The Killing Floor"; filmed as the pilot for a 10-part PBS series; received first theatrical release March 1992

1980

Cast in Alex Haley's TV series, "Palmerstown, U.S.A" for two seasons as a fictional representative of Haley's father

1979

Directed for TV series, "Knots Landing"

1979

Directed first short, "The Hero"

Directed over 30 off-Broadway plays including "Unfinished Women..." (1977) and "No Place to Be Somebody" (1987)

1976

Feature film acting debut, "Car Wash"

1974

Began writing for TV series, "Good Times" (1973-79)

1972

Off-Broadway directing debut, "The Secret Place" by Garrett Morris

1972

TV movie acting debut, "Santiago's Ark" for ABC Afterschool Specials

1971

Broadway acting debut in Melvin Van Pebbles' "Ain't Supposed to Die a Natural Death"

1970

Off-Broadway acting debut in Douglas Turner Ward's "Day of Absence" with the Negro Ensemble Company

1969

Began acting career on New York stage in Le Roi Jones's "Slave Ship" at the Brooklyn Academy of Music