Smart, talented African-American actor Michael Warren could have
followed in the star shoes of
Sidney Poitier but
Denzel Washington beat him to it. Best
remembered for his Emmy-nominated role as police officer Bobby Hill in
the
Steven Bochco crime series
Hill Street Blues (1981), Mike's respected turn on this quality
show should have led to much bigger things.
Lloyd Michael Warren was born in South Bend, Indiana in 1946, the youngest of three
children. Excelling in sports at South Bend Central High School, he
earned a scholarship to the University of California, Los Angeles,
where he majored in television, radio and film. Mike later became an
All-American basketball star at UCLA under the legendary John Wooden,
and served as the team's captain for two years. His Bruins teammates
would include Kareem-Abdul-Jabbar (then known as Lew Alcindor), Lynn
Shackleford, and Lucius Allen. His strong leadership and prowess on the
court as a guard helped propel UCLA to two NCAA national championships
during the years 1966-1968.
Following an unbilled role as a basketball referee in the film
Halls of Anger (1970),
Mike received his first big acting break by chance when a job as a
technical consultant for the basketball sequences in director
Jack Nicholson's
film
Drive, He Said (1971) led to an on-camera featured role in the film. Developing
an ad agency in Los Angeles to counterbalance the unsteadiness of a
fledgling acting career, he landed some commercial work here and there
before earning his first regular role on the short-lived TV series
Sierra (1974). He proceeded to take his earnest young mug to such
"blaxploitation" films as
Cleopatra Jones (1973) and to daytime programming with a
1976 stint on
Days of Our Lives (1965). After more episodic work and a failed series
pilot, not to mention a supporting role in the basketball-themed comedy
Fast Break (1979), Mike hit the TV jackpot with the award-winning,
critically-acclaimed
Hill Street Blues (1981).
Possessing the same kind of street savvy and cerebral handsomeness as
Denzel, Mike seemed a shoo-in for film stardom. Instead, his career
moved rather slow and erratically after the end of his hit series in
1987. He did co-star with
Cicely Tyson in the holiday season greeter
The Kid Who Loved Christmas (1990), and with
D.B. Sweeney portraying a basketball coach in
Heaven Is a Playground (1991),
but, outside of this, nothing of great significance followed. Other
series work came and went, the best of the bunch being a recurring role
on the series
Soul Food (2000).
Broaching the millennium, Michael was featured in the films
A Passion to Kill (1994),
The Hunted (1995),
Trippin' (1999),
Mother and Child (2009) and
Anderson's Cross (2010) and
American Skin (2019), but primarily found work on TV. He was a co-star on the hospital series
City of Angels (2000), was given recurring roles on
Soul Food (2000) and
Lincoln Heights (2006) and
Single Ladies (2011), and appeared in guest spots on "Buffy, the Vampire Slayer," "JAG," "The District," "Night Stalker," "Girlfriends," "Criminal Minds," and "Sadie and Emmie."
Nevertheless, Mike continues to work, has a stable home life and presently lives in Los Angeles with his second wife, Jenny, and their two children. He also has two children from his first marriage.