Here's another name you may not know. But he is a talented, hard working Bit Actor. Bill Cobbs (b. 1934) has almost 150 titles on his list on IMDb. And the variety of movies was a surprise to me as I looked through the list.
After beginning his acting career in the theater, his first film was The Taking of Pelham One Two Three (1974). That was the good one. He played a man on the platform, but it was a start. He plays small parts for years, and shows up as a bartender in Trading Places (1983) with Eddie Murphy and Dan Aykroyd. The same year he is a man in the lunchroom in Meryl Streep's Silkwood.
Also in the 1980s he is in The Cotton Club (1984) and The Color of Money (1986). Both good titles, along with a sleeper, Suspect (1987), a courtroom drama starring Cher. Suspect was a surprisingly good film.
There is a good bit of television work interspersed with Cobb's movies. He does get his own series in 1989's "Homeroom" but it only lasts one season. In fact, every regular TV role for him was on single season shows. Most of his TV work consist of Bit Parts, but he also gets some meaty roles, such as "Decoration Day" a Hallmark production starring James Garner.
Cobb is close to 60 years old in the 1990s, and he starts doing action films! New Jack City (1991) and Demolition Man (1993). He plays 'old man' in both, but he was still younger than I am now! His aging brings him even more charisma. He is totally believable as a jazz musician in Tom Hanks' film That Thing You Do (1996), which was still just a Bit Part.
In the late 1990s he appears in Hope Floats (1998), I Still Know What You Did Last Summer (1998) and a story about a talking parrot called Paulie (1998). Some good, some not so good. It is curious that his talent didn't land him better movies over the course of his career, but we see him in films called Ed (1996), Sunshine State (2002), A Mighty Wind (2003), Special Ed, The Final Patient and Duck in 2005, and none had much in the way of stars. He even gets top billing in The Derby Stallion (2005), but it was not much good.
You may remember him as a guard in Night at the Museum (2006), but do you remember Three Days to Vegas the next year, or The Morgue in 2008? He is also in a touching story in 2006 called The Ultimate Gift. It shows off Cobbs' acting talent as he plays a corporate lawyer to James Garner.
In Cobbs' latest release, The Muppets (2011) he plays the grandfather. That's a role he can certainly warm up to in a film that received some recognition. It is nice that every photo you see of Bill Cobbs shows his big smile indicating satisfaction with a great career.
In my opinion, Cobbs is right up there with Ossie Davis and Morgan Freeman in the talent department. It is a shame that he has only one film award to his name. He won the Best Actor award at the Trenton Film Festival in 2006 for The Final Patient.
I've been wanting to see "The Muppets", but haven't gotten around to it yet. If I get to see Bill Cobbs I reckon it's time to put a rush on the movie.
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen it either. I like chick flicks myself. But don't tell anyone.
ReplyDeleteI admire Bill Cobbs but didn't know his name. Remember him best from "The Bodyguard" with Whitney Houston and Kevin Kostner - one of my 'guilty pleasure' faves. I'll have to go back and check out "The Cotton Club" and "The Color of Money" and keep an eye out for the very talented Mr. Cobbs.
ReplyDeleteYes, Eve, he has a great face, a great voice, and he is so natural in his technique. He can play a cabbie, a lawyer, a janitor or a judge and he is believable, yet almost invisible.
ReplyDeleteThat's funny. I just noticed that I posted that last comment at 6:33 a.m., but it's 9:33 a.m. here on the right coast. I wonder if it's a setting in my blog or if Google is on left coast time. Curious!
ReplyDeleteMe again...I meant Kevin Costner (obviously)
ReplyDeleteKostner-Costner...their both good Bit Actors! Actually, I think Kostner would have been a better screen name. "Another blockbuster baseball film from the big 'KK!'" But Costner is his real name.
ReplyDelete