NEW YORK ā Colman Domingo has a commanding physical presence, an expressive face and soulful eyes. But his most limber and powerful tool is his voice.
It can go low in a bone-rattling baritone, like in his Nigerian-accented pimp in Janicza Bravoās āZola.ā Or it can rise to the warm, erudite rhythm of civil rights leader Bayard Rustin, in āRustin.ā In Steven Spielbergās āLincoln,ā Domingoās voice, as a union soldier, is the first thing you hear.
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Domingo, himself, isnāt sure when his voice became so resonate. Tracing it sends him back to his childhood, growing up a self-described outsider ā gay, awkward, unsure of himself ā in west Philadelphia. That voice, he says, wasnāt there 20 years ago.
āAt some point, as I grew into this person, comfortable in my own skin, sexuality, my mind, my intentions, who I am in the world, I think my voice developed more,ā Domingo says. āI donāt know that I had this voice before. All the resonance in my voice, I can hear it. Thereās confidence. Thereās gravitas to it. I hear exactly what people hear now.ā
People are finally hearing Domingo. His performance in George C. Wolfe's āRustin" ā Domingo's first time atop the call sheet ā has made the 53-year-old journeyman actor a favorite for a best actor Oscar nomination. Itās a deft and dazzling leading performance that channels all the complexities of the March on Washington architect.
Domingo also co-stars as Mister, the abusive antagonist of āThe Color Purple,ā one of the most anticipated holiday releases. The roles couldnāt be more different. Throw in the fall-festival hit āSing Sing,ā in which Domingo stars alongside a cast of mostly formerly incarcerated actors (A24 will release it in 2024), and you have the full spectrum of what Domingo is capable of.
Years of struggle as a supporting player in service of others have finally led to his turn in the spotlight.
āI started to feel like: Well, what happened, God? What is my journey? At some point, my journey felt like Bayardās journey, which is maybe why I feel weāre so close,ā Domingo says. āYou know, Iāve assisted many people getting Oscars. Iāve assisted many people getting a lot of shine and love.ā
On the heels of the actors strike ending, Domingo met recently at a Manhattan hotel overlooking Central Park. After months of being unable to promote that part of his life, he had been thrown straight into late-night appearances, interviews and a āRustinā screening in Washington, with Barack and Michelle Obama, whose Higher Ground Productions produced the film. Domingo threw a bunch of cold-weather clothes together and jumped on a plane from Los Angeles.
āBasically, I was shot out of a cannon,ā he says, smiling.
Domingo, sincere and amiable in conversation, had the appearance of someone eminently aware that a hard-earned moment had finally arrived.
āI keep telling people that Iām 54 years old. Because for this to happen now, itās unusual,ā Domingo says. (His birthday is Nov. 28.) āSuddenly, after 32 years, it seems like the sun is shining on every corner of my career.ā
Domingo was raised in a working-class family by his mother and step-father. Domingoās father, whom heās named after, wasnāt a part of his life. It wasnāt until he took an acting class at Temple University that he began acting. In regional theater, starting in San Francisco, he honed the wide-ranging ability of a character actor.
āGrowing up, I never thought I was much to look at it. I think it liberated me,ā Domingo says. āI know I can play a handsome man and a hideous man because Iām liberated. I can play anything. Iām not looking at myself. Iām not taking myself too seriously. I have the body of a clown.ā
To āThe Color Purpleā director Blitz Bazawule, Domingo is belatedly becoming the leading man he was destined to be after years of out-acting more famous co-stars.
āColman comes from the old-school of actors. You think about Bogart or you think of Daniel-Day,ā says Bazawule. āThese people, the minute you hear them or see them, thereās a clear presence. I think he is in that tradition of leading men. Colman takes the frame.ā
Voice played a central role in Domingo finding Rustin. The film, which is streaming on Netflix, depicts the tireless grassroots activism of Rustin, who was openly gay, in organizing the 1963 march where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. would give his āI Have a Dreamā speech. Domingo was flummoxed by the origin of Rustinās Mid-Atlantic accent before talking with Rachelle Horowitz, who organized transportation for the march.
āShe said, āHe made that up,āā Domingo says. āI thought that was key. Here was someone who truly created themselves at a time when everyone was trying to write you off or box you in or violate your body because youāre Black and queer. I thought: Thatās courage.ā
Domingoās own path also required self-invention. His first breakthrough came in the play āPassing Strange,ā which ran at the Public Theater in 2007 before opening on Broadway in 2008. Though celebrated ā Colman shared in an Obie award for ensemble ā once the play closed, Domingo found himself bartending again.
Resolving to make his own opportunity, Domingo wrote and staged the autobiographical āA Boy and His Soul,ā a dexterous one-man play that used the soul music of his youth (Earth Wind & Fire, Donna Summer) to evoke his life story and the inspirational figure of his mother, his greatest champion. In it, he recalls his mother telling him: āKeep a song in your heart, and you will always find your way.ā She and Domingoās stepfather died in 2016.
āI started writing my solo show in the last year of my motherās life and I didnāt know that that writing was going to save my life,ā Domingo says. āI was writing so I could be with my family 90 minutes a day.ā
Domingoās production company, Edith, is named after his mother. When her son was struggling to catch a break, she wrote at least six letters to Oprah Winfrey, Domingo says. āShe said, āShe could help you. I want you to know her.' I was like, āMom, Oprah doesnāt care about me.āā
āThe prayers and wishes people have for you are sometimes more profound than what you imagine, yourself,ā says Domingo.
In the years that followed, Domingoās range only extended. He did comedy on the series āThe Big Gay Sketch Show.ā He was Tony-nominated for āThe Scottsboro Boysā on Broadway. āFear the Walking Dead,ā in which he played Victor Strand over eight years, brought him to his widest audience yet. Directors like Barry Jenkins (āIf Beale Street Could Talkā) and Bravo (āZolaā) came calling.
āWhen I was cast in āZola,ā I thought, āMe, playing a pimp? What? In this dark comedy? What do you see in me?ā" says Domingo. "And Janicza Bravo said, āI see that the possibilities of the way you think are endless.ā
Wolfe, the esteemed theater director, first cast Domingo in āMa Raineyās Black Bottom,ā alongside Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman, as the trombone-player Cutler. Gradually, he came to see Domingo as Bayard Rustin.
āI would be talking with Mark Rickler the production designer, āOh, Colman could do that.ā Part of my brain would go, āOh, Colman could do that,ā' recalls Wolfe. "It was an organic conversation that had a degree of inevitability but I didnāt realize it at the time. I think all good smart decisions, thereās a sense of inevitability.ā
Now, Domingo finds himself collaborating with some of the Hollywood legends his mother envisioned him with. Winfrey is a producer on āThe Color Purple" and the two have become friendly. During a hike for Ava DuVernayās birthday in Hawaii (DuVernay cast Domingo in āSelmaā), he told Winfrey about the letters his mother wrote her.
āI said, āI think I just realized that you answered her letters,āā Domingo says. āAnd she clutches her heart and says, āOh, Colman.ā And then we started hiking again.ā
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Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle at: http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP