
Richard Ward
Acting
Born 1915-03-15 · Glenside, Pennsylvania, US · Died 1979-07-01
Richard Ward, (March 15, 1915 – July 1, 1979) was a gravel-voiced African American actor on the stage, television, and in films, from 1949 until his death. Though best known through his TV appearances late in life, both in sitcoms and police procedurals, Ward also had an extensive film resume and a distinguished stage career, one of the highlights of the latter being his portrayal of Willy Loman in the 1972 production of Death of a Salesman, staged in Baltimore's Center Stage (the first African American production of Arthur Miller's signature opus, produced with the playwright's blessing); Ward's own favorite among his theatrical vehicles was Ceremonies in Dark Old Men.
Acting
All Men's Dead
Heinrich Maksimov

Brubaker
Abraham

The Jerk
Father

Police Story: No Margin for Error

Freeman
Ned

Contract on Cherry Street
Jack Kittens

Family Enforcer
Gunsmith

Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman
Dewey

Starsky & Hutch
J.T. Washington

Beacon Hill
William Piper

Mandingo
Agamemnon

Starsky & Hutch
Captain Dobey

The Jeffersons

Baretta
Santine

For Pete's Sake
Bernie

Sty of the Blind Pig
Blind Jordan

Good Times

Cops and Robbers
Paul Jones

Police Story

Across 110th Street
Doc Johnson

The Brian Keith Show

Sanford and Son

Brother John
Frank

All in the Family
Ed Lewis

The Immortal

The Learning Tree
Booker Savage
Barefoot in Athens
Satyros

Nothing But a Man
Mill Hand

Black Like Me
Burt Wilson

The Cool World
Street speaker