Clifton Davis


Actor

About

Birth Place
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Born
October 04, 1945

Biography

A tall, handsome black actor best known for his work on TV sitcoms and variety shows, Clifton Davis is also an ordained Seventh Day Adventist minister as well as a composer of such hit songs as the Jackson Five's "Never Can Say Good-bye." Davis' sitcom work has included regular stints as a barber living with his mother in what was a then-pioneering show starring African-Americans, "That'...

Family & Companions

Ann Davis
Wife
Married c. 1982; Clifton Davis filed for divorce 1991.
Monica Durant
Wife
Flight attendant. Married on May 27, 2000 in Kauai, Hawaii.

Biography

A tall, handsome black actor best known for his work on TV sitcoms and variety shows, Clifton Davis is also an ordained Seventh Day Adventist minister as well as a composer of such hit songs as the Jackson Five's "Never Can Say Good-bye." Davis' sitcom work has included regular stints as a barber living with his mother in what was a then-pioneering show starring African-Americans, "That's My Mama" (ABC, 1974-75), and "Amen" (NBC, 1986-1991), in which, ironically, he played Reuben Gregory, the young minister of a church assisting a wheeling-dealing deacon (Sherman Hemsley).

A native of Chicago and the son of a Baptist minister, Davis first appeared on Broadway playing Cornelius, the feed store worker with aspirations for much more, in the Pearl Bailey cast of the hit musical "Hello, Dolly!" This led to his performing at nightclubs in the New York area as well, including the famed Reno Sweeney's in Manhattan. In 1968, he was alongside Dustin Hoffman in the cast of "Jimmy Shine" on Broadway, then performed in the Off-Broadway hit "To Be Young, Gifted and Black" (1969) and won a 1971 Theatre World Award for his Broadway work in "Do It Again." While appearing in the latter, Davis had a regular role on the ABC daytime drama "A World Apart" (1970-1971), before going to Hollywood, where he was featured in the stock cast doing the comic sketch wrap-arounds on "Love, American Style" (ABC, 1971).

Returning to NYC, Davis scored a critical hit as Valentine, one of "The Two Gentlemen of Verona" (1971-72), the John Guare-Galt MacDermot-Mel Shapiro musical based on the Shakespeare play, first in NYC's Central Park and later on Broadway. At the end of the theater season, Davis and co-star Raul Julia both earned Tony Award nominations as Best Actor in a Musical. Again Hollywood beckoned and Davis was teamed with Melba Moore for "The Melba Moore-Clifton Davis Show" (CBS, 1972), a summer variety series and then "That's My Mama." In 1975, Davis earned a Grammy nomination for "Never Can Say Good-Bye" and sang in the NBC special "Cotton Club '75." He made his TV-movie debut in "Little Ladies of the Night" (ABC, 1977).

Feature work has proven less steady for the actor. He appeared as one of the tenement dwellers in Hal Ashby's "The Landlord" (1970) and had perhaps his best role as Absalom (opposite Melba Moore) in the feature version of Kurt Weill's musical "Lost in the Stars" (1974). He also appeared as Louis Chauvin, who cannot read music but nevertheless partners with Billy Dee Williams' "Scott Joplin" in the 1977 biopic.

By the early 80s, however, despite a handful of guest appearances on TV shows and in longforms, Davis had all but disappeared from public view. Few knew that he had returned to school to work towards his divinity degree. In 1986, he re-emerged as a co-star of the NBC sitcom "Amen," which in turn led to more work in TV-movies like "Dream Date" (NBC, 1989). Davis hosted the syndicated "Stellar Gospel Music Awards" in 1990, 1992 and 1994. Yet when "Amen" left the airwaves in 1991, the actor again seemed to disappear from public view, although parishioners of the Union Seventh Day Adventist Church in Loma Linda, CA, would see him regularly. Davis' bank account was also buoyed by royalties from his musical compositions that included such songs as "Here Comes the Sunrise," "Lookin' Through the Windows" and "Searchin' For a Dream." (He had been under contract as a composer at Motown in the 70s.)

Davis emerged once again, having departed his work as associate pastor on a full-time basis, in 1995. He could be seen in guest appearances on such series as "Party of Five" and "Grace Under Fire." In 1996, it was practically de rigeur for sitcoms starring black performers to feature Davis as guest star (i.e., "Sparks," "Malcolm & Eddie," "The Jamie Foxx Show," "Living Single").

Filmography

 

Cast (Feature Film)

Prayer Never Fails (2017)
What My Husband Doesn't Know (2012)
Cover (2008)
The Climb (2002)
Joseph Martin
Max Keeble's Big Move (2001)
KINGDOM COME (2001)
Any Given Sunday (1999)
Dream Date (1989)
Bill Fairview
Don't Look Back: Story of Lero (1981)
The Night the City Screamed (1980)
Superdome (1978)
Cindy (1978)
Captain Joe Prince
Scott Joplin (1977)
Little Ladies of the Night (1977)
Comfort
Lost in the Stars (1974)
Absalom
Together for Days (1972)

Music (Feature Film)

Gloria Bell (2018)
Song
Soul Men (2008)
Song
Janice Beard (1999)
Song
Crooklyn (1994)
Song
Gleaming The Cube (1989)
Song

Cast (Special)

The 9th Annual Stellar Gospel Music Awards (1994)
Host
1993 Martin Luther King, Jr. Parade (1993)
Host
19th Annual Black Filmmakers Hall of Fame (1992)
Performer
Martin Luther King, Jr. National Holiday Parade (1992)
Host
The 7th Annual Stellar Gospel Music Awards (1992)
Host
The 22nd Annual Dove Awards (1991)
Host
The 5th Annual Stellar Gospel Music Awards (1990)
Host
The 22nd Annual NAACP Image Awards (1990)
Performer
Starathon '90 (1990)
Night of 100 Stars III (1990)
1990 King Orange Jamboree Parade (1990)
The 21st Annual Dove Awards (1990)
Host
Festival At Ford's Theater-salute To The President (1989)
A Day to Care For the Children (1989)
The 10th Annual American Black Achievement Awards (1989)
Host
The 21st Annual NAACP Image Awards (1989)
Performer
56th Annual King Orange Jamboree Parade (1989)
Host
Battle of the Network Stars XIX (1988)
Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade (1988)
The 19th Annual NAACP Image Awards (1987)
Performer
The Eleventh Annual Circus of the Stars (1986)
Celebration: The American Spirit (1976)
Mitzi and a Hundred Guys (1975)
Cotton Club '75 (1974)

Music (Special)

1990 King Orange Jamboree Parade (1990)
Song Performer
Festival At Ford's Theater-salute To The President (1989)
Song Performer ("Once In A Lifetime")

Cast (TV Mini-Series)

Halloweentown High (2004)

Life Events

1967

Made Broadway debut as Cornelius in "Hello, Dolly!", starring Pearl Bailey

1970

Film debut in Hal Ashby's "The Landlord"

1970

Appeared on ABC daytime drama "A World Apart"

1971

Earned Tony nomination for starring role in the Broadway musical "Two Gentlemen of Verona"

1971

Earned Grammy nomination for writing hit Jackson Five song "Never Can Say Good-bye"

1971

Was cast member on "Love American Style" (ABC) doing skit wrap-arounds

1972

Starred on the CBS variety series "The Melba Moore-Clifton Davis Show"

1977

TV-movie debut, "Little Ladies of the Night" (ABC)

1990

Hosted the syndicated "Stellar Gospel Music Awards" for first time

1996

Made episodic guest appearances on "Sparks", "Malcolm & Eddie", "Living Single" and "The Jamie Foxx Show"

Family

Toussaint L'Ouverture Davis
Father
Baptist minister.
Irma Davis Langhord
Mother
Nurse.
Noel Davis
Son
Born c. 1981.
Holly Davis
Daughter
Born c. 1984.

Companions

Ann Davis
Wife
Married c. 1982; Clifton Davis filed for divorce 1991.
Monica Durant
Wife
Flight attendant. Married on May 27, 2000 in Kauai, Hawaii.

Bibliography