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Sidney Poitier in five films

Two fugitives, one white (Tony Curtis) and one black (Poitier) are handcuffed together after escaping. The police patrol that transports them collides in the southern United States, where racial segregation is still the rule.

The two men hate each other but quickly understand that they have more options to get out of this together. Forced cooperation turns into friendship by getting to know each other better and finding common ground, such as having been workers before going to jail, and having suffered humiliation at the hands of their employers.

The performance earned Poitier his first Oscar nomination.

– “The lilies of the valley” (1963) –

Poitier plays an adventurer who meets a group of German Catholic Church nuns who are in the Arizona desert trying to build a church for the Hispanic community. Inspired by their dedication, he works hard and teaches them English.

This Ralph Nelson comedy drama, with its values ​​of solidarity between different communities, contrasted with the xenophobia present in the predominantly white America of the time.

“I prefer to shoot movies where people come out of the theater and feel: ‘It’s good to be alive,'” said Poitier, who won an Oscar for best actor for this role.

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– “In the heat of the night” (1967) –

Norman Jewison’s suspenseful feature film won four Academy Awards, including Best Picture. The film chillingly portrays the American South, with Poitier as a model of integrity amid the incompetence of whites in Mississippi.

After a businessman is murdered in a small town, a black man is arrested. Poitier plays a Philadelphia detective who has to go to the scene to help with the investigation.

– “Guess who is coming for dinner tonight?” (1967) –

Interracial marriage was illegal in 17 US states when they filmed this comedy about a wealthy woman bringing her fiancé to meet her parents.

The parents, liberal intellectuals who considered themselves open-minded, are surprised when they see that the fiancé is black (Poitier).

Katharine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy, playing the parents, made the film a success, but black activists criticized Poitier, saying the film left out the real problems.

By playing a prestigious doctor, according to activists, Poitier conceded to the “white fantasy” of what a black man should be.

The film was released the same year that massive racial protests followed in the United States and that the Supreme Court declared interracial marriages legal.

– “It happened on a Saturday” (1974) –

The first black comedy to become a blockbuster in the United States portrays two friends – Poitier and Bill Cosby – who have a hard time finding a lottery ticket in a purse that was stolen.

Poitier also directed and played one of the hilarious leads, in a film that featured black actors in the lead roles, rather than just being the subject of jokes.

He continued his directing success with “Let’s Do It Again” in 1975 and “A Piece of the Action in 1977, which is due to win a remake this year under Will Smith and starring Denzel Washington.

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