Leon Robinson

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Leon Robinson

Leon at Madison Square Garden after a USA Basketball vs. Puerto Rico game.
Born Leon Preston Robinson IV
March 8, 1962 (1962-03-08) (age 46)
Flag of the United States New York, New York

Leon Preston Robinson IV (born March 8, 1962) is an American actor and singer, who began his professional career as an actor in 1981.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Personal life

Leon was born in Manhattan, New York and raised in the middle class suburb of Mount Vernon. The only son of a transit authority executive and a teacher, Leon migrated to Los Angeles to play basketball for Loyola Marymount University before moving into acting.

[edit] Career

Robinson, usually credited as simply Leon, made his professional debut on the CBS Afternoon Playhouse production "Journey to Survival" in 1981. Before striking it on the big screen, Leon amassed numerous small screen credits, notably in a 1989 episode of the NBC series Midnight Caller in which he played an athlete who falls victim to crack cocaine. He also co-starred in the 1989 ABC miniseries The Women of Brewster Place, as the boyfriend of a suburbanite (played by Robin Givens). He became a part of popular music history when he was cast as a Christ-like character in Madonna's controversial 1989 music video "Like a Prayer".

Leon's early film roles included a football teammate of Tom Cruise in All the Right Moves (1983) and as Fortune Smith, the Notre Dame-bound basketball playing co-worker of Matt Dillon, in The Flamingo Kid (1984). It was only after his exposure in the Madonna video that Leon's roles became more substantial. He was a member of a singing group trying to give up his womanizing ways while his brother becomes distant in Robert Townsend's The Five Heartbeats (1991). In 1993, he co-starred as John Lithgow's henchman out to get Sylvester Stallone in Renny Harlin's Cliffhanger and followed with a turn as a disillusioned ex-jock in Above the Rim (1994). Leon also appeared as Lela Rochon's married lover in Waiting to Exhale (1996) and co-produced as well as co-starred in the romantic drama The Price of Kissing (1997).

Leon has received critical acclaim for his portrayal of two legendary singers in made-for-TV movies: David Ruffin in the 1998 NBC miniseries The Temptations and Little Richard in the self-titled 2000 NBC movie based on the life of the rock-and-roll pioneer. He received an Emmy Award nomination for his performance as Little Richard. Leon has also had recurring roles on television series such as Oz and Resurrection Blvd. and briefly hosted his own late-night talk show, The L-Bow Room, on BET.

Leon, who is also a professional singer, is the lead vocalist of his own band, Leon and the Peoples. He recently performed at The Canal Room in New York City with The Peoples and also recorded a radio PSA for Deejay Ra's 'Hip-Hop Literacy' campaign, encouraging people to read books about Tupac Shakur.

Leon has been twice nominated for an Image Award, and has won a Young Artist Award.

[edit] Filmography

[edit] External links

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