Texarkana Gazette

Acclaimed stage actor Anthony Chisholm dies

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Anthony Chisholm, an actor who was among the foremost interprete­rs of August Wilson, appearing in dozens of production­s of that playwright’s works both on Broadway and in leading regional theaters, died on Friday at his home in Montclair, New Jersey. He was 77.

Jeremy Katz of his talent agency, the Katz Co., announced the death. The cause was not specified.

Chisholm, in a career that stretched across a half-century, was known to television audiences from his recurring role as the inmate Burr Redding in the final three seasons of the HBO prison drama “Oz,” which ended in 2003. But most of his work was on the stage, and he drew particular acclaim for his appearance­s in the plays that constitute Wilson’s Pittsburgh Cycle, 10 works chroniclin­g the African American experience during the 20th century.

Four of those appearance­s were on Broadway, in “Two Trains Running” (1992), “Gem of the Ocean” (2004), “Radio Golf” (2007) and “Jitney” (2017). The “Radio Golf” effort — he played Elder Joseph Barlow — earned him a Tony Award nomination for outstandin­g featured actor in a play.

“The enjoyably raspy Chisholm is an old hand at playing a now classic Wilson archetype,” Ben Brantley wrote in The New York Times when Chisholm played Barlow in the play’s premiere at Yale Repertory Theater in 2005, “the crazy-like-a-soothsayer street person.”

A favorite Wilson role was Fielding, an alcoholic cabdriver in “Jitney,” which Chisholm played in a number of production­s, culminatin­g in his final Broadway credit. The play was first performed in 1982, but in the mid-1990s Wilson revisited it, beefing up the Fielding role, inspired in part by Chisholm.

The two had become good friends while working on “Two Trains Running.”

“You’d get a five-minute break during every hour of rehearsal,” Chisholm told The Times in 2017, “and the smokers would run out each time. I was smoking two packs a day, and August was smoking five packs a day. And so we started a connection away from the play.”

Among other things, Chisholm told Wilson about his family, and in the revised “Jitney,” Fielding had a deeper backstory about once having been a tailor. Chisholm knew it quite well.

“When August wrote the play, that whole aspect about him once being a tailor wasn’t in there,” he told Newsday in 2000, when he was playing the role off-Broadway. “We got into a conversati­on about families, and I told him about my father, who was a red cap on the railroad but had great tailoring skills and started making clothes for traveling band members. August said, ‘I like that; can I use it?’ One day he handed me a wonderful, brand-new scene, and I was so happy; it rounded out my character. Fielding wasn’t just an alcoholic; he’d had a whole ‘ nother life.”

As for how he rendered the Fielding character so compelling­ly, Chisholm confided that the secret was in the bottle Fielding nips from during the play.

“Granules of instant coffee with a slash of soy sauce mixed with water and a heaping teaspoon of cayenne,” he told Newsday. “When I drink it, the pepper burns my throat and chest like alcohol would and opens up my emotional center.”

Anthony Victor Chisholm was born April 9, 1943, in Cleveland. His father, Victor, was a tailor, and his mother, Edith (Amilia) Chisholm, was a homemaker and gift wrapper who used to make him memorize and recite poetry.

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