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Born in Orlando, FL, on July 31, 1962, Snipes grew
up in the Bronx. He developed an early interest in acting
and attended Manhattan's High School for the Performing
Arts. His mother moved him back to Florida before he
could graduate, but after finishing up high school in
Florida, Snipes attended the State University of New
York-Purchase and began pursuing an acting career.
It was while performing in a competition that he was
discovered by an agent, and a short time later he made
his film debut in the Goldie Hawn vehicle Wildcats
(1986). Although he appeared in a few more
films during the 1980s, it was Snipes' turn as a street
tough who menaces Michael Jackson in the Martin Scorsese-directed
video for "Bad" that caught the eye of director
Lee. He was so impressed with the actor's performance
that he cast him in his 1990
Mo' Better Blues as a flamboyant saxophonist
opposite Denzel Washington. That role, coupled with
the exposure that Snipes had received for his performance
as a talented but undisciplined baseball player in the
previous year's Major League, succeeded in giving the
actor a tentative plot on the Hollywood map. With his
starring role in Lee's 1991
Jungle Fever, Snipes won critical praise
and increased his audience exposure, and his career
duly took off.
That same year, Snipes further demonstrated his flexibility
with disparate roles in New
Jack City, in which he played a volatile
drug lord, and The Waterdance,
in which he starred as a former wild man repenting for
his ways in a hospital's paraplegic ward. Both performances
earned strong reviews, and the following year Snipes
found himself as the lead in his first big-budget action
flick, Passenger 57.
The film, which featured the actor as an ex-cop with
an attitude who takes on an airplane hijacker, proved
to be a hit. Snipes' other film that year, the comedy
White Men Can't Jump,
was also successful, allowing the actor to enter the
arena of full-fledged movie star.
After a few more action stints in such films as Rising
Sun (1993), which featured him opposite
Sean Connery, Snipes went in a different direction with
an uncredited role in Waiting
to Exhale (1995). The same year he completely
bucked his macho, action figure persona with his portrayal
of a flamboyant drag queen in To Wong Foo, Thanks for
Everything! Julie Newmar.
Snipes continued to focus on less testosterone-saturated
projects after a turn as a baseball player in The
Fan (1996), starring as an adulterous director
in Mike Figgis' One Night
Stand (1997) -- for which he won a Best
Actor award at the Venice Film Festival -- and as Alfre
Woodard's handsome cousin in Down
in the Delta in 1998.
That same year, Snipes returned to the action genre,
playing a pumped-up vampire slayer in Blade
and a wrongfully accused man on the run from the law
in the sequel to The Fugitive,
U.S. Marshals. (~ Rebecca Flint, All
Movie Guide)
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