It’s been nearly sixty years since BAFTA first recognised Sidney Poitier with a Foreign Actor Award for The Defiant Ones, Stanley Kramer’s landmark drama about two escaped prisoners.
By the end of the 1960s a run of acclaimed roles, including detective ‘Mister Tibbs’ in The Heat of the Night, won him power and influence in Hollywood.
Alongside Barbra Streisand and Paul Newman he created First Artists, a production company designed to give actors greater say in the films they starred in.
“The industry is moving into a new era,” Poitier said at the time. “You either lead it, or move with it, or follow it. We have opted for leadership.”
“I felt fortunate to play parts in movies that challenged prejudices, took on repressive regimes or involved interracial relationships, whose storylines dared to show a Black man as powerful, articulate and important at a time when that wasn’t acceptable to many.”
– Sir Sidney Poitier