Yaphet Kotto
About
Biography
Filmography
Family & Companions
Bibliography
Notes
About his alleged relationship to the Windsors: "Prince Albert Edward did have an affair with one of my relatives. My great-grandfather, Alexander Bell, looks like a white man. He's the real, documented proof that some hanky-panky was going on. It was something that should have never happened. I wish if we had someone from the British royal family in ours, it was someone of dignity and class, and not a drunkard and a whore-monger as the Prince was."--Yaphet Kotto, NEW YORK POST, March 9, 1997
Biography
A commanding presence in features and television since the early 1970s, Yaphet Kotto played physically powerful, often intimidating African-American men in such popular films as "Live and Let Die" (1973), "Blue Collar" (1978), "Alien" (1979) and "Midnight Run" (1988). He emerged from the New York stage in the early 1960s, working steadily in small but significant roles in features like "The Thomas Crown Affair" (1967) before moving up to supporting roles and leads in "Across 110th Street" (1971). His star-making turn came as the villainous Dr. Kananga in "Live and Let Die" (1973), which marked Roger Moore's debut as James Bond and preceded a long run as a popular character actor in such major features as "Alien" (1979) and "Brubaker" (1980). Kotto was stranded in minor-league acting features for much of the 1980s, though he rebounded in the early 1990s as the formidable Lt. Al Giardello on the critically acclaimed "Homicide: Life on the Street" (NBC, 1993-2000). Throughout his long and varied career, Kotto's performances were marked by an unerring sense of gravity, honesty and intelligence, which served him well in avoiding many of the career pitfalls suffered by African-American actors.
Born Nov. 15, 1939 in New York City, Yaphet Frederick Kotto was the son of Avraham Kotto, a businessman from Cameroon, and his wife Gladys, a nurse and army officer. Both of Kotto's parents were Jewish, which contributed greatly to a rough childhood spent defending both his faith and his race. As a teenager, he wandered into a screening of "On the Waterfront" (1954) and became captivated by Marlon Brando's performance. Kotto soon began studying at the Actors' Mobile Studio and made his professional debut as a performer at 19 in a production of "Othello." More stage roles preceded his first feature film appearance as an uncredited extra in the Rat Pack Western comedy "4 For Texas" (1963). The following year, he gave a supporting turn in Michael Roemer's pioneering independent film "Nothing But a Man" (1964), a low-budget drama about contemporary black life produced outside of the studio system. Kotto soon returned to the stage, co-starring with Ossie Davis and Louis Gossett, Jr. in "The Zulu and the Zebra" in 1965 before replacing James Earl Jones in "The Great White Hope" (1969). Between plays, he turned up as a professional thief in "The Thomas Crown Affair" (1967) and a sympathetic bartender in "5 Card Stud" (1969) with Dean Martin and Robert Mitchum.
Kotto avoided many of the stereotypical roles offered to African-American actors during the 1970s, though he would admit in interviews that the paucity of quality projects required him to occasionally participate in Blaxploitation features like "Truck Turner" (1974) and "Friday Foster" (1975). But even in those films, he projected an innately masculine strength and confidence that elevated him above the material. Kotto found better showcases for those qualities in films like "The Liberation of L.B. Jones" (1970), as a young man who exacted terrible revenge on the white landowner who had beaten him, and "Across 110th Street" (1971), a gritty crime drama which pitted his young police lieutenant against Anthony Quinn's aging lion of a police captain while pursuing crooks with stolen Mob money. During this period, Kotto also directed in "The Limit" (1972), a little-seen action-thriller about a motorcycle cop, played by Kotto, who took on a biker gang led by Ted Cassidy.
Kotto's work for MGM on "Across 110th Street" led to his casting as Dr. Kananga, a Caribbean dictator who secretly operated a heroin business in the James Bond adventure "Live and Let Die" (1973). The international exposure afforded by the film led to more dramatic roles in high-profile projects including "Roots" (ABC, 1977) and Irvin Kershner's "Raid on Entebbe" (NBC, 1977), an all-star TV movie based on Operation Entebbe, a raid carried out by Israeli special forces against Palestinian terrorists that had taken an Air France plane and its passengers hostage in Uganda. Kotto received an Emmy nomination for his performance as the charismatic but megalomaniacal Ugandan dictator Idi Amin. He soon returned to features, giving memorable performances as an autoworker who robbed his union headquarters in Paul Schrader's "Blue Collar" (1978) and as an inmate who aided warden Robert Redford in reforming a troubled prison in "Brubaker" (1980). Kotto was also a standout in the ensemble cast for Ridley Scott's science fiction classic "Alien" (1979) as Parker, the chief engineer on an ill-fated spaceship stalked by an aggressive extraterrestrial. Shortly after completing the film, Kotto was approached by director Irvin Kershner to play Lando Calrissian in "The Empire Strikes Back" (1980), but declined, citing fears that the character would result in his being typecast as a science fiction actor.
Kotto moved fluidly between features and television throughout the 1980s, earning critical acclaim as a former slave who led an uprising in "A House Divided: Denmark Vessey's Rebellion" (PBS, 1982). But the quality of Kotto's film projects went into decline as the decade wore on, with such genre pictures as "Warning Sign" (1986), "Eye of the Tiger" (1986) and the Arnold Schwarzenegger vehicle "The Running Man" (1987) relying more on his imposing physical presence than his acting abilities. He received a rare comic showcase as an FBI agent with a penchant for stealing cigarettes in "Midnight Run" (1988), with Robert DeNiro and Charles Grodin, but kept a low profile until 1993, when he was cast as Lt. Al Giardello on the critically acclaimed series "Homicide: Life on the Street." A highly cultured, articulate man of Italian-American and African-American heritage, Giardello served as mentor for the detectives of the Baltimore Police Department's Homicide unit throughout the series' seven-season run, as well as a reunion TV feature, "Homicide: The Movie" (NBC, 2000), which saw Giardello suffer a fatal shooting while running for mayor. Kotto was reportedly displeased by the lack of substantive storylines given to the character, and turned to penning scripts for several episodes, including a well-regarded 1997 story in which a murder suspect holed up in a former African Revival Movement headquarters.
Kotto's screen appearances were limited in the years following the cancellation of "Homicide." He preferred instead to devote his energies to writing, which produced not only his first novel, Slow Dance in the Promised Land (1987) but an autobiography, Royalty (1997), in which he alleged that he was descended from both the royal lines in Cameroon and England, which converged in the late 19th century when Edward VII had an affair with Princess Nakande of Cameroon, which produced a line of mixed heritage that included his father. The statements received widespread attention in the press, as well as a terse statement from Buckingham Palace, which refuted the claim. He also operated an artists' retreat resort in the Philippines that focused on holistic healing and creative inspiration.
By Paul Gaita
Filmography
Director (Feature Film)
Cast (Feature Film)
Writer (Feature Film)
Producer (Feature Film)
Cast (Special)
Cast (TV Mini-Series)
Life Events
1953
Began studying the performing arts at the Actor's Mobile Theater Studio
1956
Made professional debut in title role of "Othello"
1964
Film debut, Richard Roemer's "Nothing But a Man"
1968
Received raves for his role in William Wyler's "The Liberation of L.B. Jones"
1972
Feature directing debut, "The Limit" (also produced and starred in this movie written from his story)
1973
Played the drug-dealing nemesis of Roger Moore's 007 in "Live and Let Die"
1977
Portrayed Idi Amin in the acclaimed NBC TV-movie, "Raid on Entebbe"; received an Emmy nomination for Outstanding Performance by a Supporting Actor
1979
Portrayed a doomed crewmember in "Alien"
1983
First regular series role in the short-lived NBC drama "Love and Honor"
1988
Cast as an inept FBI lead man in "Midnight Run" co-starring Robert De Niro and Charles Grodin
1990
Starred in the Washington, DC and London stage productions of the acclaimed August Wilson play, "Fences"
1993
Played Lieutenant Al Giardello in the popular NBC series "Homicide: Life on the Street"; also scripted an episode
1996
Had another turn as an FBI agent in "Two if by Sea" starring Sandra Bullock and Denis Leary
1997
Published <i>Royalty</i>, an autobiography linking him to the British royal family
2008
Cast in the comedy "Witless Protection" starring Larry The Cable Guy
Photo Collections
Videos
Movie Clip
Trailer
Family
Companions
Bibliography
Notes
About his alleged relationship to the Windsors: "Prince Albert Edward did have an affair with one of my relatives. My great-grandfather, Alexander Bell, looks like a white man. He's the real, documented proof that some hanky-panky was going on. It was something that should have never happened. I wish if we had someone from the British royal family in ours, it was someone of dignity and class, and not a drunkard and a whore-monger as the Prince was."--Yaphet Kotto, NEW YORK POST, March 9, 1997