Poitier said one of his great regrets was that he never got to thank the waiter for his help. โIt was too late,โ he recalled.
The world lost one of its great actors when Sidney Poitier passed away last week at the age of 94. Poitier was Hollywoodโs first Black movie star and also the first Black man to win the best actor Oscar. The actor, director, and civil rights icon hailed from the Bahamas and came to New York with dreams of making it as an actor but he was held back by the fact that he couldnโt read. As an actor, there was no way he could make it without being able to read it. Poitier said that it was a kind waiter who took time out of his schedule to teach him to read. Poitier got emotional as he recalled the incident on CBS Sunday Morning to Lesley Stahl.
Sidney Poitier – the first Black man to win an Oscar for Best Actor, has died at age 94
In 2013, he spoke to Leslie Stahl for "Sunday Morning" and reflected back on the moment things began to happen in his career – when someone taught him to read https://t.co/VWCYyCGZc4 pic.twitter.com/Os5zcIEIko
— CBS Sunday Morning ๐ (@CBSSunday) January 7, 2022
โ Avi Mayer (@AviMayer) January 9, 2022
Poitier was washing dishes at a restaurant to get by after arriving in New York. He would bring newspapers to his shifts and a Jewish asked him about the news and the Poitier replied he couldnโt tell him as he couldnโt read. โI sit there, and Iโm reading one of the papers. And there was a Jewish waiter sitting at the table, an elderly man, and he saw me there,โ recalled Poitier in the episode. โHe got up, and he walked over, and he stood by the table thatโs next to the kitchen, and he said, โHi. Whatโs new in the papers?โ And I said to him, โI canโt tell you whatโs new in the papers because I donโt read very well. I didnโt have very much of an education.โโ
โHe asked, โWould you like me to read with you.โ I said to him, โYes, if youโd like to,โโ he said. Poitier explained that he sat โevery nightโ with him to teach him after his work shift was over. Poitier fought tears as he recollected the kindness of a man who had almost nothing to gain from teaching Poitier, and he still did it. โEvery night after that he would come over and sit with me, and he would teach me what a comma is and why it exists, what periods are, what colons are, what dashes are,โ said Poitier. โHe would teach me that there are syllables and how to differentiate them in a single word and consequently, learn how to pronounce them. Every night,โ said the actor getting emotional.
denzel washington on being called the next sidney poitier.
1998 clip via @amarchivepubโs โsidney poitier; one bright lightโ special. pic.twitter.com/NYNxgdGfCs
— maya cade (@mayascade) January 8, 2022
โ maya cade (@mayascade) January 8, 2022
Poitier added that it slowly and surely changed the trajectory of his life, as a human being and as an actor. He still had one regret though. โOne of my great regrets in life is that I went on to be a very successful actor, and one day I tried to find him, but it was too late, and I regret that I never had the opportunity to really thank him,โ said Poitier on an episode of the podcast โWhat It Takes.โ The actor has also paid tribute to the kind Jewish waiter in interviews with Oprah, on โ60 Minutesโ and also mentioned him in award acceptance speeches.
โYou ask me one-dimensional questions aboutโฆthe Negro-ness of my life. I am artist, man, American, contemporary. I am an awful lot of things, so I wish you would pay me the respect due.โ #SidneyPoitier (1927 โ 1/6/22 R.I.P.) on the pressโs reductive focus on his โblackness.โ
โ Free Black Thought (@FreeBlckThought) January 7, 2022
Poitier would go on to become one of the biggest stars in Hollywood and certainly the first Black movie star. Up until then, Black people only starred in bit-part roles that were cut of movies when released in conservative areas of America. As Denzel Washington perfectly put it: โYou couldnโt cut Sidney Poitier out of a Sidney Poitier picture. He was the reason a movie got made. the first solo, above the title, African-American movie star. He was unique.โ Poitier won an Oscar for his performance in โLilies of the Field,โ in which he played an itinerant laborer who helps a group of White nuns build a chapel.
You opened the door for us all. We will forever speak your name, #SidneyPoitier!
โ Debbie Allen (@msdebbieallen) January 7, 2022
Poitierโs touched upon his journey and the significance of it after being awarded an honorary Oscar for his contribution to film, in 2002. โI arrived in Hollywood at the age of 22 in a time different than todayโs, a time in which the odds against my standing here tonight 53 years later would not have fallen in my favor. Back then, no route had been established for where I was hoping to go, no pathway left in evidence for me to trace, no custom for me to follow,โ he said, reported The Guardian. โYet, here I am this evening at the end of a journey that in 1949 would have been considered almost impossible and in fact might never have been set in motion was there not an untold number of courageous, unselfish choices made by a handful of visionary American film-makers, directors, writers, and producers,โ he said before naming many of them who supported his journey.
When thinking about Sidney Poitier, my mind goes to In the Heat of the Night. He once said that he joined the film on the condition that Tibbs could slap Endicott back. The scene represented the tensions of the time, and it was huge for the culture.
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