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The adventurous life of Billy Dee Williams

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Valentine’s Day at the historic Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, in Harlem, served as the perfect backdrop for Billy Dee Williams’ fans to show their love. Williams, now 86, helped define the modern romantic leading man on the big screen, first in 1972 opposite Diana Ross in “Lady Sings the Blues,” then again three years later in “Mahogany.” “I decided to become a romantic figure on the screen,” he said.

Was that a literal decision, to become a romantic figure? “Yeah. I’ve always wanted to be. I used to tell my mom I want to be like Rudolph Valentino!”

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Knopf


Williams didn’t stop at Rudolph Valentino; he added a little Errol Flynn, as a suave swashbuckler in a cape in “The Empire Strikes Back.”  His introductory line to Princess Leia – “Hello, what have we here?” – became the title of his new memoir. It details his public and personal life; his close friendship with James Baldwin; backstage conservations with Laurence Olivier; and his love of being in love. He writes: “I had a weakness when it came to love and romance. The first moment of eye contact, a glance indicating interest, a mischievous smile, a sexy walk, a playful touch. That was my song.”

Yet, for all that charm and sex appeal, Williams said, “I’m really very insecure.”

Mankiewicz said, “It’s strange considering what you do, right? You give yourself in front of a camera with all these people watching, you become someone else. You emote. You cry. You get angry.”

“Well, maybe that’s why I become someone else, because I’m really insecure,” he said.

“Easier to be someone else than to be Billy Dee Williams?”

“Yeah. Because I don’t really like to talk about myself, and I like to keep to myself.”

Still, he’s written a pretty revealing memoir, discussing his relationships, his children, and his three marriages.

Mankiewicz asked, “Did that contribute, you think, to some relationships not working out long-term, your sort of unwillingness to open up?”

“No, I’m just a philanderer, you know?” he laughed.

Williams moved to Los Angeles in 1970. But he’s a New Yorker. He grew up across the street from Central Park. His parents called him “Sonny.” His dad worked three jobs. His mother had a beautiful singing voice. She’s the one who wanted to be in show biz. “I never really looked to be an actor,” Williams said.

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A painting by the artist Billy Dee Williams.

Billy Dee Williams


He set out to be a painter; he was good, too, landing a scholarship at the National Academy of Design. 

Then, a chance meeting with a CBS casting agent led to an acting gig. The roles just kept coming. “And all of a sudden, I found myself going in that direction,” Williams said. “I always said, you know, every time I wanted to go right, something would say, No, no, Billy, go left.

In 1971 he landed a part that changed his life, playing Chicago Bears running back Gale Sayers in the TV movie “Brian’s Song,” the true story of the relationship between Sayers and teammate Brian Piccolo (played by James Caan). “That whole experience for me, as I described it, was an act of love,” Williams said.

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Billy Dee Williams and James Caan in “Brian’s Song.”

ABC


Sayers and Piccolo became friends, and the first interracial roommates in the NFL. Then came Piccolo’s terminal cancer diagnosis. Fifty-five million Americans tuned in. To say it had an impact is an understatement. Mankiewicz asked, “You’ve had people come up to you and say, ‘I never thought I could connect with a Black guy like that?”

“There was a gentleman that I ran into who was a bigot, who would not socialize with Black folks,” Williams replied. “He was so deeply touched, it changed his whole perspective on things.”

Perspectives in Hollywood, though, change slowly. After his success in the early ’70s, Williams expected job offers to pour in. After all, he’d earned the nickname “the Black Clark Gable.”  But he lacked something that Clark Gable had: opportunity. “It is frustrating, there’s no question about it,” Williams said. “But you know, you take a negative and you try to see what you can do with it and maybe turn it around in some kind of an interesting fashion.”

The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings
Clockwise from left: Billy Dee Williams with Diana Ross in “Lady Sings the Blues”; as activist Brian Walker in “Mahogany”; as a federal agent out for revenge in “Hit!”; as a barnstorming ballplayer in “The Bingo Long Traveling All-Stars & Motor Kings”; as “old smoothy” Lando Calrissian, with Carrie Fisher and Harrison Ford, in “The Empire Strikes Back.”

Getty Images; Paramount Pictures; Lucasfilm


Williams did more than turn the situation around; he just kept looking for compelling characters to play. “I wanted to do the full spectrum of colors,” he said. “You know, that’s how I see myself.”

He found such a character when George Lucas called with an offer to work in a galaxy far, far away – as Lando Calrissian in “The Empire Strikes Back,” the first Black character in the Star Wars universe. Williams, though, saw him as something else.  “When I heard the name Calrissian, I said, whoa, Armenian. Let me see what I can with this. And then I got the cape and I thought, whoa, Errol Flynn!

By the end of the movie, Lando is clearly a good guy, but millions of Star Wars fans still saw him as the villain who handed Han Solo to Darth Vader. “I’d pick my daughter up from school, kids running up to me: You betrayed Han Solo! I’d go on an airplane and I’d have a flight attendant, You betrayed Han Solo! I mean, it was crazy!”

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Well, he DID betray Han Solo (here frozen in carbonite), but Lando Calrissian would make up for that. 

Lucasfilm


Crazier still is that this talented actor with a 60-plus-year career (including a stint on TV’s “Dynasty”) might be best known to a certain generation for a string of Colt 45 beer commercials in the 1980s. He had it then; he still had it at age 77, on “Dancing With the Stars,” and at 82, returning to fly the Millennium Falcon as Lando Calrissian in “Star Wars Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker.”

For a “shy” and “insecure” man, Billy Dee Williams sure has plenty to say.

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Billy Dee Williams, with Turner Classic Movies host Ben Mankiewicz, in Los Angeles. 

CBS News


Mankiewicz said, “In a sense, I’m surprised you wrote the book.”

“Well, I said, okay, you know, you’re getting on in years, and I started thinking legacy,” he said. “I want to leave something for the grandkids and the kids that come after that.”

“That they understand who Billy Dee Williams was?”

“Yeah,” Williams replied. “And I want people to know that, you know, I didn’t approach life feeling like a victim; I just went out and had an adventure!”

READ AN EXCERPT: “What Have We Here?” by Billy Dee Williams

     
For more info:

     
Story produced by Aria Shavelson. Editor: Mike Levine. 



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Former Bolivian President Evo Morales claims his car was fired upon in attempted assassination

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Former President Evo Morales of Bolivia claimed he survived an assassination attempt on Sunday after unidentified men opened fire on his car. He was not injured and there was no immediate confirmation of the attack from authorities.

Morales alleged the shots were fired while he was being driven in Bolivia’s coca leaf-growing region of Chapare, the ex-president’s rural stronghold whose residents have blockaded the country’s main east-west highway for the past two weeks.

The roadblocks — protesting what Morales’ supporters decry as President Luis Arce’s attempts to sabotage his former mentor and bitter political rival — have isolated cities and disrupted food and fuel supplies.

Morales, who led Bolivia from 2006 to 2019, emerged unscathed from the alleged attack Sunday, appearing on his weekly radio show in his usual calm manner to recount what happened.

He told the radio host that as he was leaving home for the radio station, hooded men fired at least 14 shots at his car, wounding his driver.

Morales was quick to blame his successor, President Arce, with whom he is fighting to be the candidate of governing socialist party in next year’s presidential election. He claimed that Arce’s government resorted to physical force having been unable to defeat him politically.

Bolivia Morales
Former President Evo Morales speaks to supporters after marching to La Paz, Bolivia, to protest current President Luis Arce, Monday, Sept. 23, 2024.

Juan Karita / AP


“Arce is going to go down as the worst president in history,” Morales said. “Shooting a former president is the last straw.”

Officials in Arce’s government did not respond to requests for comment on the incident.

Cellphone video circulating online shows Morales’ driver bleeding from the back of his head. Morales can be seen in the passenger’s seat holding a phone to his ear as the vehicle swerves and a woman’s voice shrieks “Duck!”

The footage shows the car’s front windshield cracked by at least three bullets and its rear windshield shattered. Morales can be heard saying, “Papacho has been shot in the head,” apparently referring to his driver.

“They are shooting at us,” Morales continues on the phone. “They shot the tire of the car and it stopped on the road.”

Morales’ claim deepens political tensions in Bolivia at a volatile moment for the cash-strapped Andean nation of 12 million.

In June, there was an apparent attempted coup by a rogue military general leading a rebellion, where armored vehicles and troops marched to the presidential palace and tried to force their way into the building. The rebellion retreated after Arce confronted the general, bringing the alleged coup attempt to a head, and ordered him to stand down. The general and other senior officers were later arrested.


Apparent military coup fails in Bolivia

04:28

Then, last month, Morales led a massive march against the government’s mismanagement of the economy that quickly devolved into street clashes with pro-government mobs. Imported goods are scarce and prices are rising. Drivers wait for hours to fill up at gas stations. The gap between the official and black-market exchange rates is widening.

Earlier this month, the feud between Morales and Arce moved to the courts as Bolivian prosecutors launched an investigation into accusations that Morales fathered a child with a 15-year-old girl in 2016, classifying their relationship as statutory rape.

Morales has dismissed the allegations as politically motivated and refused to testify in the case. Since reports surfaced of a possible arrest warrant against him, the ex-president has been holed up in the Chapare region, in central Bolivia, where supportive coca growers have kept vigilant watch to protect him from arrest.

President Arce accuses Morales of trying to undermine his administration to advance his own ambitions.



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Open: This is “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” Oct. 27, 2024

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Open: This is “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” Oct. 27, 2024 – CBS News


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This week on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance discusses Russian disinformation campaigns and the Trump-Vance ticket’s “women problem.” Plus, former Republican Rep. Liz Cheney joins.

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Full interview: GOP vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance

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Full interview: GOP vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance – CBS News


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Watch Margaret Brennan’s full interview with Republican vice presidential candidate Sen. JD Vance of Ohio, a portion of which aired on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan” on Oct. 27, 2024.

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