Mantan Moreland
Biography
Born just after the turn of the century in Louisiana, Mantan began running away from home at age 12 to join circuses and medicine shows, only to be brought back time and again. During these times he sharpened his comic skills and developed routines and acts that eventually became popular on the vaudeville stage, or what was then called the "chitlin' circuit." A solo performer by nature, he often teamed up with other famous comics (such as Ben Carter) to keep working, and became a deft performer of "indefinite talk" routines, where two quicksilver comics continually topped each other in mid-sentence, as if reading each other's mind (i.e., "Say, did you see...?" "Saw him just yesterday...didn't look so good"). Mantan's focus gradually shifted his trade toward film, where he initially appeared in servile bits (shoeshine men, porters, waiters). However, his talent for making people laugh couldn't be overlooked and he soon earned featured status in Harlem-styled western parodies and grade "A" comedy films playing the superstitious, ever-terrified manservant running from any kind of impending doom.
Moreland's peak in movies came with his recurring role as Birmingham, the skittish chauffeur, in the "Charlie Chan" series, where he was forever forewarning his boss to stay away from an obviously dangerous case or situation. Though haunted mansions were an ideal place for setting off his stereotyped character, Mantan would be haunted in a different way by this Hollywood success in years to follow. By the 1950s, racial attitudes began to change and, with the rise of the civil rights movement, what was once considered hilarious was now interpreted as demeaning and offensive to both blacks and whites. Mantan and others, such as Stepin Fetchit, were ostracized and ridiculed by Hollywood for their past negative portrayals. It took decades for audiences to forgive and newer generations to forget the Depression-era comedy of Mantan Moreland in order for the actor to come back.
In the late 1960s he managed a modest resurgence on TV and in commercials and occasional films, allowing him to work again with such comic heavyweights as Bill Cosby, Godfrey Cambridge and director Carl Reiner. It was all too brief, however, for Mantan, long suffering from ill health, died of a cerebral hemorrhage in 1973, just as he was settling in to his renewed popularity. Today, audiences tend to be kinder and more understanding of Moreland, remembering him as a highly talented comic who, in the only way he knew, broke major barriers and opened the doors for others black actors to follow.
Filmography
Tarzan's New York Adventure
as Sam, the Nightclub Janitor (uncredited) 1942
The Patsy
as Barber Shop Porter 1964
Watermelon Man
as Joe the Counterman 1970
King of the Zombies
as Jefferson 'Jeff' Jackson 1941
Cabin in the Sky
as First Idea Man 1943
A-Haunting We Will Go
as Porter (uncredited) 1942
Eyes in the Night
as Alistair 1942
It Started with Eve
as Railway Porter (uncredited) 1941
Revenge of the Zombies
as Jefferson 'Jeff' Johnson 1943
Charlie Chan in the Secret Service
as Birmingham Brown 1944
Hit the Ice
as Porter with Snowshoes (uncredited) 1943
Dressed to Kill
as Rusty 1941
The Scarlet Clue
as Birmingham Brown, Chauffeur 1945
Dark Alibi
as Birmingham Brown 1946
The Strange Case of Doctor Rx
as Horatio B.Fitz Washington 1942
The Shanghai Cobra
as Birmingham Brown 1945