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Bill Cobbs

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Bill Cobbs
Cobbs on the set of Get Low in 2009.
Born
Wilbert Francisco Cobbs

(1934-06-16) June 16, 1934 (age 90)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationActor
Years active1974–present
FamilyJames Baskett (cousin)

Wilbert Francisco "Bill" Cobbs (born June 16, 1934) is an American actor.[1]

Early life

Cobbs was born in Cleveland, Ohio, to a mother who was a domestic worker and a father who worked in construction.[2]

Career

As an amateur actor in the city's Karamu House Theater, Cobbs starred in the Ossie Davis play Purlie Victorious. Cobbs served in the United States Air Force as a radar technician for eight years; he also worked in office products at IBM and sold cars in Cleveland. In 1970, at the age of 36, he left for New York to seek work as an actor. There he turned down a job in the NBC sales department in order to have time for auditions. He supported himself by driving a cab, repairing office equipment, selling toys, and performing odd jobs. His first professional acting role was in Ride a Black Horse at the Negro Ensemble Company. From there he appeared in small theater productions, street theater, regional theater, and at the Eugene O'Neill Theatre.

Cobbs was in Vegetable Soup (1976), a New York public television educational series, and he made his feature film debut in The Taking of Pelham One Two Three in 1974. Cobbs has an extensive film career and has appeared and been a regular on many television programs, including The Michael Richards Show, The Outer Limits, I'll Fly Away, Yes, Dear, The Sopranos, Six Feet Under, The Others, JAG, The Drew Carey Show, October Road, One Tree Hill, Star Trek: Enterprise (as Dr. Emory Erickson, inventor of the Transporter) and many more. He had a recurring role as George, a blind grief-support-group member, in the TV series, Go On, which premiered in 2012.

In 2006, Cobbs played a supporting role in Night at the Museum as Reginald, a security guard on the verge of retirement. The character also served as an antagonist to the story. He played basketball coach and retired basketball player Arthur Chaney in Disney's Air Bud and Medgar Evers' older brother Charles Evers in Rob Reiner's Ghosts of Mississippi. He had a role in the Coen Brothers' The Hudsucker Proxy and played fictional jazz pianist Del Paxton in Tom Hanks' That Thing You Do. In 2013, Cobbs costarred in Oz the Great and Powerful, and in late 2014 reprised his role of Reginald in Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb. He recorded a public service announcement for Deejay Ra's Hip-Hop Literacy2 campaign, encouraging reading of Ice-T's autobiography.

Filmography

Film

Television

  • Sesame Street – episode – 17.30 – Lee (1985)
  • Kate & Allie – multiple episodes – Sam Butcher (1986)
  • I'll Fly Away – regular – Lewis Coleman (1991–93)
  • Coach – episode – Why So Happy, Hayden? – George (1993)
  • NYPD Blue – episode – The Nutty Confessor – Norval Stevens (1996)
  • The Outer Limits – multiple episodes – "The Camp", second Elder (1997) – "Fathers and Sons", Joe Dell (1999)
  • The Wayans Bros. (1997)
  • Walker, Texas Ranger – episode – Full Contact – Gino Costa (1997)
  • The Sopranos – episode – Do Not Resuscitate – Reverend James, Sr. (2000)
  • JAG – episode – Answered Prayers – Chaplain Matthew Turner (2001)
  • Six Feet Under, Season 1 – episode 6 (2001)
  • JAG – episode – Port Chicago – Chaplain Matthew Turner (2002)
  • JAG – episode – Posse Comitatus – Chaplain Matthew Turner (2003)
  • The West Wing – episode – Enemies Foreign and Domestic – Alan Tatum (2002)
  • JAG – episode – A Merry Little Christmas – Chaplain Matthew Turner (2003)
  • Star Trek: Enterprise – episode – Daedalus – Dr. Emory Erickson (2005)
  • The Glades – episode – Honey – Gregory Richmond (2010)
  • Harry's Law – episode – American Dreams (2011)
  • Greenleaf – episode – One Train May Hide Another (2016)
  • Rugrats – episode – A Rugrats Kwanzaa (2001)

References

  1. ^ "Bill Cobbs". IMDB.
  2. ^ "Bill Cobbs Biography (1935-)". Film Reference. Retrieved March 16, 2013.

External links