
With Father's Day steadily approaching within the next few weeks, we decided to take a look at some of the most notable African American fathers that have graced television and motion picture screens over the years. In addition to our comprehensive list below, check out our gallery featuring all your favorites.
Most Notable Black Dads On TV & In Film (In No Specific Order):
1. Redd Foxx: Fred Sanford
2. Bill Cosby: Heathcliff 'Cliff' Huxtable
3. Flex Alexander: Flex Washington
4. Terry Crews: Julius Rock
5. Duane Martin: Robert James
6. Sherman Hemsley: George Jefferson
7. Eddie Murphy: Dr. Dolittle, Evan Danielson
8. John Amos: James Evans, Sr.
9. James Earl Jones: Coming To America
10. Denzel Washington: John Q
11. Ice Cube: Durell
12. Rockmond Dunbar: Kenneth 'Kenny' Chadway
13. Laurence Fishburne: Furious Styles
14. Will Smith: Chris Gardner
Do you agree or disagree with our list? Please feel free to leave a comment below.
Black Dads On TV & In Film
Father Knows Best: Black Dads On TV & In Film
Various images of African American fathers have graced television and motion picture screens over the years. From Bill Cosby's lovable Cliff Huxtable on 'The Cosby Show' to Terry Crews' comic relief on 'Everybody Hates Chris,' it's easy to cite memorable father figures. Following his role as the father in 'Dr. Dolittle,' Eddie Murphy returns to the big screen as another dad, Evan Danielson, in 'Imagine That.' The film hits theaters June 12. See some of the others.
Paramount/ NBC/ Sony/ CBS
Bill Cosby: Heathcliff "Cliff" Huxtable
There wasn't a more even-tempered, junk food-craving and all-around loveable television father than Bill Cosby. During the '80s, Cosby reigned supreme as Cliff Huxtable, the patriarch of 'The Cosby Show.' Cosby had almost total creative control on the series, in which he played an obstetrician raising his five children with his attorney wife, Clair, in Brooklyn Heights, New York. The show stressed the importance of family and higher education, the latter of which Cosby has advocated for and financially supported for decades.
NBC
Denzel Washington: John Q
Academy Award-winning actor Denzel Washington hasn't played the role of father many times in his career, although he has four children of his own. Yet in the 2002 'John Q,' the 54-year-old Mount Vernon, N.Y., native effortlessly conveyed how one father, John Quincy Archibald, holds a hospital hostage until his son's name is put on the heart transplant list.
New Line
Duane Martin: Robert James
The UPN sitcom 'All of Us,' loosely based on Will Smith and Jada Pinkett-Smith's blended family, found actor Duane Martin as Robert James, a divorced entertainment reporter trying to keep the peace between his ex-wife, Neesee, and his fiancée, Tia, for the sake of his son. The show ran for four seasons before being canceled in 2007.
Cliff Lipson, CBS
Eddie Murphy: Dr. Dolittle
In the family comedy 'Dr. Dolittle,' Eddie Murphy plays the title character, a doctor who discovers that he can talk to animals. In real life, the Academy Award nominee is a father of eight. In the film, the former 'Saturday Night Live' cast member plays a father to two daughters, Charisse, played by Raven-Symone, and Maya, played by Kyla Pratt. Two follow-ups were released and another is said to be in production.
20th Century Fox
Eddie Murphy: Evan Danielson
On June 12, comedian Eddie Murphy will play father to another little girl in 'Imagine That.' The film follows Murphy as Evan Danielson, a successful financial executive who turns to his 7-year-old daughter for help with his business problems. The 'Beverly Hills Cop' star played a father in the film 'Dr. Dolittle' and is the second highest grossing actor in motion picture history.
Paramount
Flex Alexander: Flex Washington
Being a single father is not a story that gets broadcast too often, but Flex Alexander nailed the role of Flex Washington on 'One on One.' This former Salt 'N' Pepa background dancer played a full-time dad whose daughter moves in with him when his ex-wife takes a job overseas. Flex also created and produced the UPN sitcom, which ran for five seasons, from 2001 until 2006.
UPN
Ice Cube: Durell
In the comedy 'First Sunday,' Ice Cube plays Durell, a man who plots to rob a church with his best friend to pay off a debt and keep his son's mother from moving to Atlanta. The former NWA rapper lucks up and is able to prevent his ex from uprooting and taking their son down South.
Sony
James Earl Jones: King Jaffe Joffer
Tony Award-winning actor James Earl Jones played royalty in the 1988 comedy 'Coming to America.' As his Majesty King Jaffe-Joffer of Zamunda, Jones' character allowed his son, Akeem (played by Eddie Murphy), to visit America in search of a wife before returning home to go through with his arranged marriage.
Everett Collection
John Amos: James Evans Sr.
For three seasons, Emmy Award-winner John Amos portrayed James Evans on 'Good Times,' a sitcom about a family living in an apartment in a Southside Chicago housing project. After the third season, James was killed, leaving wife Florida to raise their three children without the strong hand and discipline of her husband.
CBS Photo Archive / Getty Images


Comments: (19)
Add a comment
By: Tee on 6/09/2009 1:39PM
When did the list below ever played dads on TV show?
Denzel Washington
Eddie Murphy
Will Smith
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: raywil3 on 6/10/2009 1:19PM
The topic was TV/Film. Denzel was a distraught father in "John Q". Eddie Murphy in Dr. Dolittle
Report This
By: Stacy on 6/09/2009 2:36PM
Why are giving him credit for being anything but a dead beat dad? He has never seen or spent any time at all with his youngest child. Shocking, another Black Men that fathers a child and abandons them to be raised by somebody else because they don't like the mother - thanks Eddie, for doing everything you can to further the sterotype.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Q on 6/13/2009 5:37PM
damn baby loose the bitterness. so he and the mother dont get along. the divorce rate is at 50%. maybe she was impossible to live with or cheated on him. ever considered that. just because a father doesnt live with his children doesnt mean he is not a great father and doesnt love them. if the parents dont stay together the children have to live with one of them. and how the hell do you know if and when he sees his children. you all up in there, huh?
Q
Report This
By: JIMMY on 6/09/2009 5:56PM
No Matter if you like the mother or not. You Slept With Her. The child did not create itself. All Brothers be a man and take care of yours, and that is more than a check each month...and if necessary set the mother straight that you are doing it for the child. Also set your current womsn straight by TELLING her that you have a responsibility to your flesh and blood, and will do what is right financially, and by spending time with your son or daughter. MAN UP!!!
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Q on 6/12/2009 9:08AM
dear angry person
my advise to the women with this philosophy is, be more selective. dont just have a baby with any man who will get you pregnant. choose the father of your baby. dont have a baby with a bumb, then complain that he is a bumb. you get what you get. some men dont know how to man up make sure yours does. choose your childs daddy.
Q
Report This
By: baby37grand on 6/10/2009 1:20PM
My people! My people! We are still totally susceptible to the definitions of fatherhood given to us by white folks. We blame ourselves for the damage done by the persistent, pernicious, deadly white onslaught against the black man and the black family since 1619. That we are still here, and relatively sane, is a complete miracle! Cosby, Denzel, Will Smith, and so many others portray the "daddies" white America has done everything it can to destroy. As Douglass said, they take the food out of your mouth and accuse you of being hungry; they prevent you from getting a job and arrest you for vagrancy; they deny you an education, then accuse you of being ignorant. My people! My people! When, oh, when, are we going to "move ourselves from mystification [including the boob tube], to meaningful struggle!
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: Stacy on 6/14/2009 10:50PM
What are you talking about? Is Eddie wanted by the mob? Does he have a highly contagious deadly disease? Does he have ties to Al-Qaeda? No? Then there is NO excuse for abandoning his child. This has nothing to do with Black or White or "The Man" holding us back - White, black, hispanic, asian - abandoning your child means your are a sorry excuse for a father. End of story
Report This
By: Heather on 6/10/2009 3:06PM
Where's Bernie Mac? I loved that dude.
Reply to this Comment | Report This
By: quent97 on 6/12/2009 3:28PM
I'm so glad you mentioned the Mac man. I so loved him in his 'name sake' show. RIP
Report This