Earle Hyman

Earle Hyman

ActorAdditional Crew
Born
October 11, 1926
Died
November 17, 2017
Awards
1 wins, 2 nominations

Earle Hyman is a distinguished African American actor who had a 46-year-long career on Broadway, where he was nominated for a Tony Award. Hyman also was nominated for an Emmy Award as Outstanding Guest Performer in a Comedy Series for his appearance on The Cosby Show (1984) playing Bill Cosby's…

Biography

Earle Hyman is a distinguished African American actor who had a 46-year-long career on Broadway, where he was nominated for a Tony Award. Hyman also was nominated for an Emmy Award as Outstanding Guest Performer in a Comedy Series for his appearance on The Cosby Show (1984) playing Bill Cosby's father Russell Huxtable.

Born in Rocky Mount, North Carolina on October 11, 1926, Hyman and his family moved to Brooklyn, where he grew up. His parents took him to a production of Henrik Ibsen's "Ghosts" starring Alla Nazimova in Brighton Beach as a present for his 13th birthday, which made him want to be an actor. Impressed with Ibsen, he learned Norwegian, a language he became fluent in, enabling him to act in Norway, where he keeps a second home.

In 1944, Hyman made his debut on Broadway in Philip Yordan's Anna Lucasta (1949), a hit that ran for 957 performances. He next appeared on Broadway in 1952, in Moss Hart's "The Climate of Eden", which was a flop, then played the Prince of Morocco the following year in a production of The Merchant of Venice (1973) starring Luther Adler as Shylock. In 1955, he had a role in No Time for Sergeants (1958), a hit that made Andy Griffith a star. Over the next 37 years, he would appear on Broadway another 11 times, ending with his turn in the title role of Ibsen's The Master Builder (1960) in 1992. The circle that had begun back in 1939 had been completed.

In addition to his work on Broadway, he was a charter member of the American Shakespeare Theatre that was created in 1955, playing Othello in 1957. (He had appeared as The Moor two years earlier on a Camera Three (1954) production). He was in the London production of A Raisin in the Sun (1961) in 1959. For his theatrical work in Norway, the Norwegian sovereign awarded him St. Olav's medal in recognition of "outstanding services rendered in connection with the spreading of information about Norway abroad".

Hyman made his movie debut as an uncredited extra in the Oscar-winning The Lost Weekend (1945) in 1945, but it was TV that proved more welcoming to his talent. He appeared on numerous TV programs from 1954 to 2001, most famously on "The Cosby Show".

Having been in a relationship with Rolf Sirnes (1926-2004), Hyman lived with the Norwegian seaman for fifty years. Hyman learned Norwegian through Sirnes, who was originally from Haugesund.

In the 1990s they lived together in New York City.

Actor

Saturday Night LiveSaturday Night Live(1975)as Spectator
Twice in a LifetimeTwice in a Lifetime(1999)as Charley Freeman, Jack
The Moving of Sophia MylesThe Moving of Sophia Myles(2000)as Bishop Heath
CosbyCosby(1996)as Rev. Mitchell
Hijacked: Flight 285Hijacked: Flight 285(1996)as Wayne Edwards

Additional Crew

GandaharGandahar(1987)

Archive Footage

PoliticsNation with Al SharptonPoliticsNation with Al Sharpton(2011)as Self
WatchMojoWatchMojo(2006)as Self - Panthro
The 72nd Annual Tony AwardsThe 72nd Annual Tony Awards(2018)as Self
Thundercats Ho! Creating a Pop-Culture PhenomenonThundercats Ho! Creating a Pop-Culture Phenomenon(2005)as Panthro
The Cosby ShowThe Cosby Show(1984)as Russell Huxtable

Known for

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Photos 13

Bill Cosby, Ethel Ayler, Earle Hyman, Phylicia Rashad, Clarice Taylor, Malcolm-Jamal Warner, and Joe Williams in The Cosby Show (1984)Montrose Hagins and Earle Hyman in Hijacked: Flight 285 (1996)Earle Hyman in The Cosby Show (1984)Tempestt Bledsoe, Earle Hyman, and Malcolm-Jamal Warner in The Cosby Show (1984)Bill Cosby, Gary LeRoi Gray, Earle Hyman, Sabrina Le Beauf, Geoffrey Owens, Phylicia Rashad, Clarice Taylor, and Jessica Ann Vaughn in The Cosby Show (1984)Bill Cosby, Earle Hyman, Phylicia Rashad, and Clarice Taylor in The Cosby Show (1984)

Credit Score: Earle Hyman

9876
19451946194719481949195019511952195319541955195619571958195919601961196219631964196519661967196819691970197119721973197419751976197719781979198019811982198319841985198619871988198919901991199219931994
Russell Huxtable
Thu Sep 20 1984 – Thu Apr 30 1992
#NameScoreYearWinNomKnownWinsNomsVotes
1The Cosby Show150.0019847.462938949
2The Defenders30.0019617.91422567
3The Lost Weekend8.0019467.94743322
4Thundercats5.0019857.90020548
5Camera Three5.0019566.61379
6A Different World3.7519877.1039010
7The Bamboo Prison2.5019546.100293