School Daze
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Spike Lee
Laurence Fishburne
Giancarlo Esposito
Spike Lee
Leonard Thomas
Harold Kohon
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Homecoming at a southern college.
Director
Spike Lee
Cast
Laurence Fishburne
Giancarlo Esposito
Spike Lee
Leonard Thomas
Harold Kohon
Ellen Holly
Dominic Hoffman
Cleopas Johnson
Alan Ward
Alpha Kappa Alpha
Morehouse College Students
Bill Lee
Phyllis Hyman
Earl Gardner
Stanley Hunte
Paul Peabody
Robert L Cole
Jue Yao
Angela Ali
Roy Johnson
Thomas Mckiver
Tracy Robinson
Monique Mannen
Toni Ann Johnson
Sandra Billingslea
Darryl M Bell
Alba Domini Leone
Lewis Eley
Angela Lewis
Alfred Wyatt
Regis Iandiorio
Sanford Allen
John Longo
Michelle Bailey
Rusty Cundieff
Cylk Cozart
John Pintavalle
Sharon Ferrol
Kelly Woolfolk
Traci Tracey
Tim Hutchinson
Derrek W Jones
Keith John
Gregory Elliot
Guy Killum
Ivan Goff
Alva Rogers
Tyra Ferrell
Paula Brown
Kevin Rock
Coach Pritchard
Frances Morgan
Gayle Dixon
Jacquelyn Bird
Kyme
John Purcell
Darryl Hayes
Harold Jones
R Hendrickson
Laura Smith
Jhoe Breedlove
Florante P. Galvez
Joe Seneca
Kent Wood
Sharon Owens
Rod Hodge
Patmore Lewis
Cecil Bridgewater
Consuela Lee Morehead
Valentino Jackson
Noel Dacosta
Marion Dinheiro
Cinque Lee
Edward Henderson
William N Ross
Delphine T Mantz
Tracey Coley
Dawn Jackson
Dennis Abrams
Edward G Bridges
Greta Martin
Laurnea Wilkerson
Roger Smith
Isaac Greggs
Mike Taylor
Jenario Foxx
Lester Mccorn
Howard University Students
Terri Lynette Whitlow
Barry Finclair
Tisha Campbell-martin
James Cheeseman
Cassi Davis
Erik Todd Dellums
William Morgan Sheppard
Clark College Students
Kirk Taylor
Tanya Lynne Lee
Elliot Rosoff
Stephanie Clark
Anthony Thompkins
Art Evans
Kappa Alpha Psi
Albert Cooper
Coach Hunt
Leslie Sykes
Cecelia Hobbs
Virgil Jones
Gregory Komar
William Easley
Jon Faddis
Spelman College Students
Joe Chambers
Samuel L. Jackson
William House
Kadeem Hardison
Reginald Tabor
Terence Blanchard
Eartha Robinson
Louann Montesi
Jasmine Guy
Michelle Whitney-morrison
Ossie Davis
A.j. Johnson
Delta Sigma Theta
Bill Nunn
Omega Psi Phi
Harold L Boyd
James Bond
D Stuckenbruck
Patience Higgins
Karen Owens
Branford Marsalis
Harold Vick
Liz Sciabarra
Gregg Burge
Frank Wang
Winterton Garvey
Edward Preston
Joie Lee
Keith Wright
Eric A Payne
Atlanta University Students
Tracey Lewis
Morehouse College Cheerleaders
Paula Birth
Richard F Gordon
Kasi Lemmons
Phi Beta Sigma
Crew
Roland Alexander
Johnathan Alvarado
Patrick Amos
Norman Andrews
Louis Bailey
Devonne Baker
George Balomes
Larry Banks
Julian Barber
Sean Barnave
Kenny Barron
Roderick Belin
William Bennett
Norman Bielowicz
Tony Bingham
Grace Blake
Shirlene Alicia Blake
Cliff Booker
Zelmer Bothic
Alfred Brown
Alton Brown
Barry Alexander Brown
Uzee Brown
Carol Buck
Allan Bullard
Ron L Burchfield
Tommie Burns
Bill Butler
Marivee Cade
Byron Cage
Tisha Campbell-martin
Ruth Carter
Parnes Cartwright
Lou Cerborino
Joe Chambers
Vincent Chauncey
Vincent Chauncey
Larry M. Cherry
Arthur Clark
John Clark
John Clark
Luther Conley
Robert Connor
Addison Cook
Albert Cooper
Jeffrey Cooper
Stanley Cowell
Eric Curtright
Todd Daniels
Edsel Davis
Illya Davis
Wesley Days
Giorgio Desaint Angelo
Stuart Deutsch
Ron Devaughn
Ernest Dickerson
Michael V Dicosimo
Acua Dixon
Everett Douglas
Miranda Dowdy
Karen Dreyfus
James Duke
David Elliott
Perry Ellis
Troy Ellis
Eddie Evans
Clare Fisher
Tom Fleischman
Michael Fleming
Stewart Flemister
Randy Fletcher
Stanley Forman
Eileen Fosom
Hillary Francais
Crystal Garner
Rudy Gaskins
J Kathleen Gibson
Roderick Giles
Francois Girbaud
Marithe Girbaud
Ron Goldsmith
Harley Gould
Stefan Gresham
Andre Griffin
Fred Griffin
Fred Griffin
Portia Griffin
Juliet Haffner
Curtis Harmon
John Harris
Tina Harris
Tyrone Harris
Donald Harrison
Dyane Harvey
Emanuel Henighan
Samuel Henriques
Haywood Henry
Milt Hinton
Michael Hitchcock
Felicia Hokins
Samuel Howard
Alison Howard-smith
Stanley Hunte
Graig Hutchinson
Phyllis Hyman
Jennifer Ingram
Pamm Jackson
Kenton Jakub
Jack Jeffers
Teddy Jenkins
Teddy Jenkins
Keith John
Carl Johnson
John R Johnson
Michael Johnson
Patrice Johnson
Rhett Johnson
Lisa Jones
Loretha Jones
Raymond Jones
Stephanie Jones
Steve Jones
Matia Karrell
Kim Kearse
Mark Kellar
Mustapha Khan
Mustapha Khan
Gretchen Kibbe
Scott King
Kenny Kirkland
Bruce Kitzmeyer
Dan Korintus
Kyme
Irby Langley
Bill Lee
Bill Lee
Bill Lee
Cinque Lee
David C. Lee
Kevin Lee
Spike Lee
Spike Lee
Scott Leftridge
Jesse Levine
James Lloyd
Todd Macnicholl
Gary Maddox
Mario Majette
Ray Mantia
Suzi Margolin
Branford Marsalis
Herman Masoln
John Massie
Anthony Mays
Joseph M Mcculloch
Warren Mckenna
Maurice Mcrae
Casasndra Mcsheppard
Marcus Miller
Grover Mitchell
John Monroe
Mark Moore
Consuela Lee Morehead
Consuela Lee Morehead
David Morrow
Bruce Morton
Reni Mosley
Cedric Napoleon
David Nelson
Donnell Nelson
Larry Norton
Brian O'kelley
Peter Odabashian
Eric Oden
Rolf Pardula
John D Parran
Leroi Patton
Eddie Pazant
Noelle Penraat
Dennis Peterson
Dale Pierce-johnson
Lonnie Plaxico
Benjamin Powell
Mikki Powell
Seldon Powell
Frank Prinzi
Robi Reed-humes
Rufus Reid
Maxine Roach
Larry Robertson
Janis Robinson
Stacy Robinson
Joe Rodman
Mindy Rodman
Bruce Rogers
Benjamin Ross
Monty Ross
Kevin Russell
Leander Sales
Otis Sallid
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Ossie Davis (1917-2005)
He was born Raiford Chatman Davis on December 18, 1917 in Cogdell, Georgia. His parents called him "R.C." When his mother registered his birth, the county clerk misunderstood her and thought she said "Ossie" instead of "R.C.," and the name stuck. He graduated high school in 1936 and was offered two scholarships: one to Savannah State College in Georgia and the other to the famed Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, but he could not afford the tuition and turned them down. He eventually saved enough money to hitchhike to Washington, D.C., where he lived with relatives while attending Howard University and studied drama.
As much as he enjoyed studying dramatics, Davis had a hunger to practice the trade professionally and in 1939, he left Howard University and headed to Harlem to work in the Rose McClendon Players, a highly respected, all-black theater ensemble in its day.
Davis' good looks and deep voice were impressive from the beginning, and he quickly joined the company and remained for three years. With the onset of World War II, Davis spent nearly four years in service, mainly as a surgical technician in an all-black Army hospital in Liberia, serving both wounded troops and local inhabitants before being transferred to Special Services to write and produce stage shows for the troops.
Back in New York in 1946, Davis debuted on Broadway in Jeb, a play about a returning black soldier who runs afoul of the Ku Klux Klan in the deep south. His co-star was Ruby Dee, an attractive leading lady who was one of the leading lights of black theater and film. Their initial romance soon developed into a lasting bond, and the two were married on December 9, 1948.
With Hollywood making much more socially conscious, adult films, particularly those that tackled themes of race (Lonely Are The Brave, Pinky, Lost Boundaries all 1949), it wasn't long before Hollywood came calling for Davis. His first film, with which he co-starred with his wife Dee, was a tense Joseph L. Mankiewicz's prison drama with strong racial overtones No Way Out (1950). He followed that up with a role as a cab driver in Henry Hathaway's Fourteen Hours (1951). Yet for the most part, Davis and Dee were primarily stage actors, and made few film appearances throughout the decade.
However, in should be noted that much of Davis time in the '50s was spent in social causes. Among them, a vocal protest against the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, and an alignment with singer and black activist Paul Robeson. Davis remained loyal to Robeson even after he was denounced by other black political, sports and show business figures for his openly communist and pro-Soviet sympathies. Such affiliation led them to suspicions in the anti-Communist witch hunts of the early '50s, but Davis, nor his wife Dee, were never openly accused of any wrongdoing.
If there was ever a decade that Ossie Davis was destined for greatness, it was undoubtly the '60s. He began with a hit Broadway show, A Raisin in the Sun in 1960, and followed that up a year later with his debut as a playwright - the satire, Purlie Victorious. In it, Davis starred as Purlie, a roustabout preacher who returns to southern Georgia with a plan to buy his former master's plantation barn and turn it into a racially integrated church.
Although not an initial success, the play would be adapted into a Tony-award winning musical, Purlie years later. Yet just as important as his stage success, was the fact that Davis' film roles became much more rich and varied: a liberal priest in John Huston's The Cardinal (1963); an unflinching tough performance as a black soldier who won't break against a sadistic sergeant's racial taunts in Sidney Lumet's searing war drama The Hill (1965); and a shrewd, evil butler who turns the tables on his employer in Rod Serling's Night Gallery (1969).
In 1970, he tried his hand at film directing, and scored a hit with Cotton Comes to Harlem (1970), a sharp urban action comedy with Godfrey Cambridge and Raymond St. Jacques as two black cops trying to stop a con artist from stealing Harlem's poor. It's generally considered the first major crossover film for the black market that was a hit with white audiences. Elsewhere, he found roles in some popular television mini-series such as King, and Roots: The Next Generation (both 1978), but for the most part, was committed to the theater.
Happily, along came Spike Lee, who revived his film career when he cast him in School Daze (1988). Davis followed that up with two more Lee films: Do the Right Thing (1989), and Jungle Fever (1991), which also co-starred his wife Dee. From there, Davis found himself in demand for senior character parts in many films throughtout the '90s: Grumpy Old Men (1993), The Client (1994), I'm Not Rappaport (1996), and HBO's remake of 12 Angry Men (1997).
Davis and Dee celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in 1998 with the publication of a dual autobiography, In This Life Together, and in 2004, they were among the artists selected to receive the Kennedy Center Honors. Davis had been in Miami filming an independent movie called Retirement with co-stars George Segal, Rip Torn and Peter Falk.
In addition to his widow Dee, Davis is survived by three children, Nora Day, Hasna Muhammad and Guy Davis; and seven grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
Ossie Davis (1917-2005)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Winter February 12, 1988
Released in United States on Video September 28, 1988
Released in United States 1988
Released in United States October 1988
Released in United States March 1999
Shown at Munich Film Festival June 25-July 3, 1988.
Shown at International Flanders Film Festival in Ghent, Belgium October 12-22, 1988.
Tisha Campbell replaced Vanessa Williams, who withdrew from the cast. The film is in memory of Kwame Olantunji, Willi Smith, Harold Vick, and Dr Wendall P Whalum.
Completed shooting May 1987.
Began shooting March 9, 1987.
Released in United States Winter February 12, 1988
Released in United States on Video September 28, 1988
Released in United States 1988 (Shown at Munich Film Festival June 25-July 3, 1988.)
Released in United States March 1999 (Shown in Los Angeles (American Cinematheque) as part of program "Out in the Streets: The Films of Spike Lee" March 15-20, 1999.)
Released in United States October 1988 (Shown at International Flanders Film Festival in Ghent, Belgium October 12-22, 1988.)