Earl Cameron

Earl Cameron

Actor
Born
August 8, 1917
Died
July 3, 2020

Earl Cameron did not set out to be an actor. Bermudian by birth, Cameron joined the British Merchant Navy in the 1930s for the travel opportunities that it afforded. By the early 1940s, with World War II in full swing, Cameron found himself in London working menial jobs to survive. After seeing a…

Biography

Earl Cameron did not set out to be an actor. Bermudian by birth, Cameron joined the British Merchant Navy in the 1930s for the travel opportunities that it afforded. By the early 1940s, with World War II in full swing, Cameron found himself in London working menial jobs to survive. After seeing a West End revival of the musical comedy Chu Chin Chow, he got the acting bug. When an actor didn't show up for a performance, Cameron replaced the actor in the production. This was followed by a series of roles on the London stage.

In 1951, he received a big break when he was cast in Pool of London (1951). The film directed by Basil Dearden in which Cameron played a dockworker who falls in love with a local woman, was significant in that it was one of the first British films to feature a Black man in a non-stereotypical role. He was essentially the UK counterpart to Sidney Poitier, who made his film debut around the same time, although equally talented, he never became a star. Toward the end of the decade, he would work with Dearden again in Sapphire (1959), where he would play a physician who is the brother of the title character, who was murdered while passing for White.

Other significant film film roles in Cameron's career include Thunderball (1965) where he played opposite Sean Connery as Pinder, Bond's Bahamian assistant. Cameron played an ambassador in A Warm December (1973), a film starring and directed by Poitier. In The Interpreter (2005), a film directed by Sydney Pollack , in which he played Edmond Zuwanie, a dictator loosely based on Robert Mugabe.

Cameron continued to work steadily in film and television into his nineties. One of his last appearances was in They've Gotta Have Us (2018), a documentary on Black actors in Hollywood produced by BBC Two.

He died in 2020 at the age of 102.

Actor

Up on the RoofUp on the Roof(2013)as Grandad
InceptionInception(2010)as Elderly Bald Man
CasualtyCasualty(1986)as Horace Mumford
The QueenThe Queen(2006)as Portrait Artist
Dalziel and PascoeDalziel and Pascoe(1996)as Arthur Nolan

Thanks

The OscarsThe Oscars(2021)

Self

The One ShowThe One Show(2006)as Self - Actor
They've Gotta Have UsThey've Gotta Have Us(2018)as Self - Actor
Channel 4 NewsChannel 4 News(1982)as Self
Britain's Greatest Generation(2015)as Self
Frozen Out(2013)as Self

Archive Footage

Race Against Time(2011)as Williams
The Making of 'The Queen'(2007)as Portrait Artist
Best of BritishBest of British(1987)as Self

Known for

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Photos 9

Earl Cameron and Evroy Deer in Neverwhere (1996)Gary Bakewell and Earl Cameron in Neverwhere (1996)Gary Bakewell and Earl Cameron in Neverwhere (1996)Earl Cameron in Secret Agent (1964)Patrick McGoohan and Earl Cameron in Secret Agent (1964)Earl Cameron and Becky Sapp

Credit Score: Earl Cameron

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Elderly Bald Man
Fri Jul 16 2010
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownWinsNomsVotes
1Inception375.0020108.8482815044
2The Message12.5019768.90011929
3The Message10.0019778.10153967
4Secret Agent10.0019658.2001726
5The Queen7.5020067.316119757
6Sapphire7.5019597.2142969
7Thunderball5.0019656.911137819
8Pool of London4.8819517.1001462
9The Interpreter2.5020056.400114979