NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series
Nominations
NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture, NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actor in a Drama Series, NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actor in a Television Movie, Mini-Series or Dramatic Special, Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series, MTV Movie Award for Best Male Performance, Teen Choice Award for Film - Choice Actor, Teen Choice Award for Choice Movie: Chemistry, BET Award for Best Actor
Movies
Love & Basketball, Higher Learning, The Wood, Juice, In Too Deep, Against the Ropes, Scream 2, The Program, Alfie, Major League II, The Mod Squad, Big Trouble, Dracula 2000, First Time Felon, Deadly Voyage, Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood, Breakfast of Champions, Brother, A Day in the Life, Daybreak, Conviction, Perfume, You, Me & The Circus, MTV 20: Jams
TV Shows
Resurrection, House, Street Justice, Here and Now, Shooter
Interesting Facts
#
Fact
1
Is left handed.
2
He stared in Blackstreet's music video "Before I Let You Go"(1994).
3
Had the name Quincey in two films, Juice (1992) and Love and Basketball (1999).
4
In 1994, he switched to baseball as co-star of Major League II (1994), taking over the role of "Willie Mays Hayes" from originator Wesley Snipes.
5
Appeared in in the magazine article "Can't a Brother Get No Love?" which appeared in the August 1999 issue of Vibe.
July 2004: Daughter K'mari Mae born. Mother is fiancée (now wife) Keisha Spivey.
8
He and actor Marlon Wayans have been friends since childhood.
9
Attended the Fiorello LaGuardia High School of the Performing Arts in New York, NY, a school formed from the merger of two New York City high schools for the arts, one of which was the school on which the movie and TV show, Fame (1980), was based.
10
Began writing poetry at age ten.
11
Is a member of a hip-hop group called Wolfpak, which he formed with his cousin in 1991.
The whole Black Hollywood thing doesn't exist for me anymore. Once someone says that to themselves, they subject themselves to those rules.
2
The only limitations that I can have are the ones that I set on myself.
3
People don't want to pay eight or nine dollars to go see a problem that they have in their life, on screen. They pay to get away from that. That's why they watch soap operas.
4
I've been writing since I was a kid. Short stories, poetry, and all of that, and acting is just an extension of that. It just came naturally. So it's coming full circle.
5
[1999, in an interview in "Newsday"] I'm going to be the first black President of the United States. If [Ronald Reagan can do it, I know I can.