Clark Johnson

American-Canadian actor and director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Clark Johnson (born September 10, 1954)[1] is an American-Canadian actor and director, who has worked in both television and film. He is best known for his roles as David Jefferson on Night Heat (1985–88), Clark Roberts on E.N.G. (1989–94), Meldrick Lewis in Homicide: Life on the Street (1993–99) and Augustus Haynes in The Wire (2008).

Born (1954-09-10) September 10, 1954 (age 71)
OthernamesClark "Slappy" Jackson, Clarque Johnson, J. Clark Johnson
Almamater
OccupationsActor, director
Quick facts Born, Other names ...
Clark Johnson
Born (1954-09-10) September 10, 1954 (age 71)
Other namesClark "Slappy" Jackson, Clarque Johnson, J. Clark Johnson
Alma mater
OccupationsActor, director
Years active1981–present
RelativesMolly Johnson (sister)
Taborah Johnson (sister)
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Johnson was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series for the pilot episode of The Shield. He was nominated for a Genie Award for Best Actor for Nurse.Fighter.Boy (2008) and Best Supporting Actor for Rude (1995), both directed by Clement Virgo. At the 6th Canadian Screen Awards, he received the Earle Grey Award for lifetime achievement.

Early years

Johnson was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to an Afro-Caribbean father from Trinidad and Tobago and a white mother. The family later moved to Canada.[2] He has three siblings[2] including jazz singer Molly Johnson and actress and singer Taborah Johnson.

Johnson attended Eastern Michigan University on a partial athletic scholarship for American football, but he was expelled after he was caught stealing food from the school cafeteria.[3] He attended several other universities including the University of Ottawa and Loyola College/Concordia University, where he played Canadian football, before ending up at the Ontario College of Art as a film major.[3] He was drafted by the Toronto Argonauts in the seventh round of the 1978 CFL draft but ultimately did not play professionally.

Career

Johnson started in film doing special effects, including David Cronenberg's The Dead Zone. This behind-the-scenes work often served as a "backup" for him during the early stages of his acting career.[citation needed]

He began performing in feature films in 1981, landing roles in the films Killing 'em Softly, Colors, Wild Thing, Adventures in Babysitting, and Nowhere to Hide. He also acted in a number of television shows early in his career, including The Littlest Hobo, Night Heat, Hot Shots and E.N.G.. He starred in the first episode of The Women of Brewster Place in 1989 as Butch Fuller.[citation needed]

Homicide: Life on the Street

In 1993, Johnson became part of the original cast of the television series Homicide: Life on the Street playing Detective Meldrick Lewis for all seven seasons and the reunion movie, as well as directing several episodes. Johnson regularly improvised during filming and made up his own jokes and dialogue; writer and producer James Yoshimura called Clark the "king of the ad lib".[4] Although the ensemble nature of the show meant that Johnson never played a minor role, he became an even larger presence after his character was paired with a new partner, Mike Kellerman (played by Reed Diamond). The two detectives became the central figures in a plot line surrounding a Baltimore drug lord whose financial resources and front as a devoted community servant make it nearly impossible for the police department to charge him. Johnson made the transition to director with the season four episode "Map of the Heart".[5][6] He also directed "Betrayal",[7] "Valentine's Day",[8] "Full Court Press"[9] and "The Twenty Percent Solution".[10] David Simon, the author of the non-fiction book Homicide was based upon, as well as a writer and producer for the series, commented that the transition from actor to director was made easy by Johnson's familiarity with the show and that he was one of the better directors in terms of keeping the tone of the show consistent.[6] In 2013, Johnson made a brief cameo as Lewis in the Law & Order: Special Victims Unit episode "Wonderland Story" when the squad are at a retirement party for John Munch (Richard Belzer).[citation needed]

The Wire

Johnson worked on The Wire, reuniting with writer David Simon. Johnson directed the pilot episode "The Target",[11][12] the second[13][14] and fifth first-season episodes, and the series finale. He plays Augustus Haynes, the dedicated and principled editor for The Baltimore Sun city desk.[15]

Alpha House

In 2013, Johnson starred as Sen. Robert Bettencourt (R-PA) in Amazon's Alpha House, a political comedy written by Doonesbury creator Garry Trudeau.[16] Along with John Goodman, Johnson plays one of four Republican senators living together in a house on Capitol Hill. Johnson also directed the season finale for the show's first season. Johnson spent the summer of 2014 filming season two.[citation needed]

Directing

Johnson's other directing credits include the big-screen releases The Sentinel (2006) and S.W.A.T. (2003), and episodes of Third Watch as well as the HBO original production Boycott (2001), a project which he helmed and in which he also acted. He also directed the first episodes of Seasons 1 and 2 of the 2005 mini-series Sleeper Cell. He also directed the first and last episodes of The Shield, along with other episodes of that series.[citation needed]

Johnson directed the pilot episode of the FX drama Lights Out. The series stars fellow The Wire cast members Pablo Schreiber and Reg E. Cathey and focuses on a retired heavyweight boxing champion.[citation needed]

Johnson is a guest instructor at HB Studio.[17]

Filmography

Actor

More information Year, Title ...
Film acting credits
YearTitleRoleNotes
1987 Adventures in Babysitting Black Gang Leader
1988 Iron Eagle II CPT. Richie Graves
1989 Renegades J.J.
1994 Drop Zone FBI Agent Bob Covington
Final Round Trevon
1995 Rude Reece
Soul Survivor Busha
1997 The Planet of Junior Brown Mr. Pool
2000 Love Come Down Dean
2003 S.W.A.T. Deke's handsome partner Cameo appearance
2006 The Sentinel Charlie Merriweather
2008 Nurse.Fighter.Boy Silence
2009 Defendor Captain Fairbanks
2014 Bird People McCullan
2015 Hyena Road General Rilmen
2017 Magnum Opus Robert Cochran
Brawl in Cell Block 99 Detective Watkins
2018 222 The King of Hearts Short film
2019 Tammy's Always Dying Doug
2025 Late Fame Arnold
2026 Mayday Post-production
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More information Year, Title ...
Television acting credits
YearTitleRoleNotes
1985–88 Night Heat David Jefferson 18 episodes
1986 Hot Shots Al Pendleton 13 episodes
1988–92 Katts and Dog Lennie 3 episodes
1989 The Women of Brewster Place Butch Fuller 2 episodes
1989–94 E.N.G. Clarke Roberts 14 episodes
1991–92 Hammerman Hammerman 11 episodes
1993 North of 60 Sonny Ross Episode "Southern Comfort"
1993–99 Homicide: Life on the Street Meldrick Lewis 122 episodes
1998 Cold Squad Derrick Clark 2 episodes
2000 Deliberate Intent James Perry Television film
Homicide: The Movie Meldrick Lewis
2002 Soul Food Terrell Episode: "Lovers and Other Strangers"
2005 Tripping the Wire: A Stephen Tree Mystery Stephen Tree Television film
2008 The Wire Gus Haynes 10 episodes
The Shield Handsome Marshal Episode "Family Meeting"
2009 Crash & Burn Walker Hearn 5 episodes
2012 Unforgettable Clay Jacobs Episode "Blind Alleys"
2013 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Meldrick Lewis Episode "Wonderland Story"
2013–14 Alpha House Sen. Robert Bettencourt 21 episodes
2018 Bosch Howard Elias 4 episodes
Seven Seconds KJ's father Episode "That What Follows"
2019 Evil Father Amara 4 episodes
2025–present Daredevil: Born Again Cherry 7 episodes
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Director

More information Year, Title ...
Film directing credits
YearTitleNotes
2003S.W.A.T.
2006The Sentinel
2019Juanita
2020 Percy
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More information Year, Title ...
Television directing credits
YearTitleNotes
1996–98 Homicide: Life on the Street
5 episodes


"Map of the Heart"
"Betrayal"
"Valentine's Day"
"Full Court Press"
"The Twenty Percent Solution"

1997 Fast Track
1998 Welcome to Paradox
La Femme Nikita
1999 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Episode: "Sophomore Jinx"
2000 NYPD Blue Episode: "Lucky Luciano"
The West Wing Episode: "Six Meetings Before Lunch"
The Beat
Third Watch Episode: "Nature or Nurture?"
City of Angels
The City
2001BoycottTelevision film
2002–08 The Wire
The Shield
7 episodes


"Pilot"
"The Spread"
"Blowback"
"Playing Tight"
"Blood and Water"
"The New Guy"
"Family Meeting"

2004 The Jury Episode: "Lamentation on the Reservation"
The Secret ServiceTelevision film
2005N.Y.-70Television film
2005–06 Sleeper Cell
2 episodes


"Al-Faitha"
"Al-Bagara"

2010–11 Memphis Beat Episode: "It's All Right Mama"
King
2 episodes


"Lori Gilbert"
"T-Bone"

2011 Homeland
2012 The Walking Dead Episode: "Nebraska"
2013 Alpha House Episode: "In the Saddle"
2014–15 Hell on Wheels
2 episodes


"Bear Man"
"Struck"

2015 Black Sails
2 episodes


"X"
"XII"

American Odyssey
2 episodes


"Bug Out"
"Real World"

2016 Mad Dogs Episode: "Flares"
Shut Eye Episode: "The Tower - Reversed"
2016–18 Luke Cage
2017 Six Episode: "Confession"
Taken Episode: "A Clockwork Swiss"
2018 The Purge Episode: "Release The Beast"
2019–21 City on a Hill
3 episodes


"High on the Looming Gallows Tree"
"Apophasis"
"Pax Bostonia"

2020 Your Honor Episode: "Part Four"
2021 Mayor of Kingstown
2 episodes


"Along Came a Spider"
"The Devil Is Us"

2022 Alaska Daily Episode: "It's Not Personal"
2023–24 Accused
2 episodes


"Kendall's Story"
"Marcus' Story"

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Awards and nominations

More information Institution, Year ...
Institution Year Category Work Result
ACTRA Awards 2009 Outstanding Performance - Male Nurse.Fighter.Boy Nominated
Black Reel Awards 2007 Outstanding Director The Sentinel Nominated
2017 Outstanding Directing, Drama Series Luke Cage Nominated
2019 Outstanding Directing, TV Movie/Limited Series Juanita Nominated
2017 Outstanding Directing, Drama Series The Get Down Nominated
Canadian Screen Awards 2018 Earle Grey Award[18] N/a Won
Gemini Awards 1995 Best Guest Performance in a Dramatic Series E.N.G. Nominated
Genie Awards 1996 Best Supporting Actor[19] Rude Nominated
2010 Best Actor[18] Nurse.Fighter.Boy Nominated
NAACP Image Awards 1999 Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series Homicide: Life on the Street Nominated
Primetime Emmy Awards 2002 Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series[20] The Shield ("Pilot") Nominated
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References

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