Stanley Bennett Clay

Stanley Bennett Clay (born March 18, 1950) is an American actor, writer, playwright, stage and film director, and producer based out of Manhattan, New York. He is best known for his acting work in the films All the President's Men (1976), Minstrel Man (1977) and I, Robot (2004).[1]

Stanley Bennett Clay
Born (1950-03-18) March 18, 1950
Chicago, Illinois, United States
NationalityAmerican
OccupationActor, writer, playwright, Film director
Years active1969–present
Notable work
Ritual (play)
AwardsNAACP Theater Awards

Though a lifelong actor, Stanley Bennett Clay has stated he prefers directing and producing: "I've always been the one in charge. I like the responsibility. At 12, I produced my first show: wrote it, composed the music, directed it, sold tickets, controlled the concessions—lemonade and cookies—and starred in it in my parents' living room. People from the neighborhood lined up to see it. Yeah, it's about control. I'm doing my own things, doing them the way I want them done." [2]

Career

Stanley received three NAACP Theater Awards for co-producing, writing, and directing the play Ritual, which he also adapted for film.[3][2][4][5] Stanley has served as a mentor to other artists including award-winning author Nahshon Dion Anderson and Terrance Dean.[6]

Author

Stanley has written the novels Looker and In Search of Pretty Young Black Men, both published by Simon & Schuster[7] and the novels Aching For It, Hollywood Flames and Madame Frankie published by Ellora's Cave.

Tribute to E. Lynn Harris

Shortly after the sudden death of fellow author E. Lynn Harris, Stanley was contacted by the writer Terrance Dean, who felt compelled to write a tribute to the trailblazing Harris. Stanley agreed and, along with James Earl Hardy, penned Visible Lives: Three Stories In Tribute To E. Lynn Harris. [6] Each story begins with the author reflecting on the impact E. Lynn Harris had on them as a writer.[8]

Private life

Clay was a long-time friend of actor Raymond St. Jacques and was one of the pall bearers at his funeral.[9]

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gollark: C is technically not TC, but it's... practically good enough that it can, theoretically, do anything another language can.
gollark: While it technically isn't NECESSARY, you get more expressive power out of actually having a working type system and modules.
gollark: > nobody needs thisI feel like it's nicer to be able to declare modules and stuff rather than to just prefix all your code with "moduleWhatever".

References

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