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American actor and filmmaker (1928–2024) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John Everett DeCoste (December 16, 1928 – April 23, 2024), known professionally as Terry Carter, was a pioneering black American actor and filmmaker, known for his roles as Sgt. Joe Broadhurst on the television series McCloud[1][2][3][4] and as Colonel Tigh on the original Battlestar Galactica.[1][2][3]
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Terry Carter | |
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Born | John Everett DeCoste December 16, 1928 New York City, U.S. |
Died | April 23, 2024 95) New York City, U.S. | (aged
Occupation(s) | Actor, filmmaker |
Years active | 1957–2012 |
Spouse(s) | Anna DeCoste (1964–1990) Beate Glatved DeCoste (1991–2006) Selome Zenebe DeCoste (2009–2024) |
Website | www |
Carter was born and raised in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, New York City, and lived beside a synagogue in a mostly-Italian neighborhood. Raised in a bilingual home,[1][5] his mother, Mercedes, was a native of the Dominican Republic,[3][4][5] and his father, William DeCoste, was of Argentinian and African-American descent[3][5] who operated a radio repair business.[6] His parents raised him to engage on social issues. With his father, he first walked a picket line at age 8.[5]
Future jazz pioneer Cecil Taylor was his best friend.[1] At age 9, in his first on-stage role, he played the seafaring Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama.[1]
Carter graduated from Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan in 1946.
Upon graduation, he joined the United States Merchant Marine as a merchant seaman, traveling abroad.[1][5] Returning to the U.S., he became a mail clerk for the New York Museum of Modern Art, and watched every film programmed there.[5]
Thereafter, he attended postsecondary courses at Hunter College, the University of California, Los Angeles, Boston University and Northeastern University, ultimately returning to the latter institution decades after dropping out to complete his Bachelor of Science degree in communications in 1983.[5][7][8]
Following his initial Northeastern stint, Carter also completed two years of coursework at St. John's University's School of Law (which either waived the requirement of a Bachelor's degree for Carter or had not yet implemented that prerequisite for admission prior to the widespread implementation of the graduate-level Juris Doctor in lieu of the nominally undergraduate Bachelor of Laws) before leaving to become an actor.[9]
While studying at St. John's law school, Carter accidentally encountered actors Howard Da Silva and Morris Carnovsky, who convinced Carter that he had the makings of an actor. After his second year of law school, Carter dropped out of school to pursue acting full time.[5]
In the early 1950s, Carter studied acting with Howard Da Silva[2]
Carter gained theater experience in several productions on the Broadway and off-Broadway stage. His Broadway credits include playing the male lead opposite Eartha Kitt in the play Mrs. Patterson [2][4] and performing the title role in the musical extravaganza Kwamina.[4]
Carter also acted in numerous television series, specials, and theatrical films. His first breakthrough screen role was as the sole black regular cast member of The Phil Silvers Show (popularly known as Sergeant Bilko), appearing as Pvt. Sugie Sugarman in 91 episodes between 1955 and '59 -- becoming one of the first black actors appearing regularly on an American television program.[1][2][10][4]
Carter played boxer Rosie Palmer in a 1964 episode of the ABC drama Breaking Point. In 1965, he became the only black actor to portray a soldier in the long-running World War II TV drama series Combat![1][2] -- appearing as the "guest star" in the Season Three episode "The Long Wait."[citation needed]
From 1965 to 1968, Carter worked as a weekend newscaster for WBZ-TV in Boston,[11] where he became an anchor-reporter. He was their first black TV news anchor, and the first in New England. Some sources said he was the world's first black TV newsman.[2][3][12]
During his three-year stint, he also served as the station's first opening-night movie and theater critic.[3] Although WBZ said he resigned from the station, Carter told the black press that he had been fired, because Westinghouse (which owned WBZ) objected to his personal involvement in numerous community projects.[13] His departure left Boston without any black TV news reporters.[citation needed]
Returning to acting in 1970, Carter primarily portrayed clean-cut, no-nonsense, authority figures.[14]
In his longest-running role, starting in 1970, Carter starred in the TV detective series McCloud as NYPD Sergeant Joe Broadhurst, partner of the title character played by Dennis Weaver. Carter's role lasted for seven years.[1][2][3]
In 1970, he starred with Van Johnson and Ray Milland in the TV movie Company of Killers.[3]
In 1973, he played the lead role in the early Blaxploitation film Brother on the Run. In a seminal hit of the genre, Foxy Brown (played by Pam Grier), he played her boyfriend.[1][2][3]
By contrast, in the 1974 children's film Benji, he played the part of Police Officer Tuttle.[2] The same year he starred in the blaxploitation horror film Abby along with William Marshall and Carol Speed.
Carter is best known internationally for his late-1970s co-starring role as Colonel Tigh in the popular science-fiction TV series Battlestar Galactica.[1][2][3] He was originally cast as Lieutenant Boomer, but was cut following a roller skating accident that fractured his ankle. After replacing Carter with Herb Jefferson, Jr., producer Glen A. Larson instead offered Terry Carter the role of Colonel Tigh, second in command of the ragtag fleet of starships, giving the series the distinction for the time of having more than one regular African-American character in the principal cast.[citation needed]
He played the role of CIA chief "Texas Slim" in Hamilton, a multinational action-adventure Swedish film (1999).[14] More recently, Carter had a recurring role in Hotel Caesar, Norway's most popular soap opera,[14] as Solomon Tefari, an Ethiopian businessman and father of one of the main characters.[citation needed]
In 1975, Carter started a small Los Angeles corporation, Meta/4 Productions, Inc.[4] for which he produced and directed industrial and educational presentations on film and videotape for the federal government[4] -- including the National Endowment for the Arts and the Library of Congress -- and for PBS television.[10]
Carter was president of Council for Positive Images, Inc., a non-profit organization he formed in 1979, dedicated to enhancing intercultural and interethnic understanding through audiovisual communication and within media.[2][3][10][14]
Under the council's auspices, Carter produced and directed award-winning dramatic and documentary programs for presentation on PBS and distribution worldwide.[2][3][10]
In the 1980s, Carter created, directed and produced the TV miniseries K*I*D*S, about a diverse group of teens, struggling with the intense conflicts facing American youth of the era. In 1985, the series was awarded a Los Angeles Emmy[3][14]
Carter's 1988 PBS documentary for the American Masters series -- A Duke Named Ellington, about the life of jazz legend Duke Ellington -- was nominated for the Emmy for Outstanding Informational Special.[1][2][3][14]
Carter was a Governor on the board of Governors of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences (who award the The Emmys), serving two terms. In 1983, he was inducted into the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, serving on the foreign films committee and the documentary committee for the Academy Awards ("The Oscars").[3][14]
In the early 1990s, the United States Information Agency sent him on a goodwill tour of China to liaise with China's students and filmmakers.[1][2] He spent the last years of his career working in Scandinavia.[2]
In 2013, he retired to New York City.[2]
Carter died in New York City on April 23, 2024, at the age of 95.[1][2][15]
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