Biography
A native of Brooklyn, New York, actor Michael Kenneth Williams fell into a typecast with repeated portrayals of hoods, toughs and career criminals from project to project. Williams entered acting courtesy of professional dancing, which he began at the age of 22; in that arena, his unique and individualistic moves caught the attention of producers and landed him in a string of music videos. Williams subsequently decided to pursue classical training as an actor, which he received via participation in the National Black Theater Company and New York's La' MaMA Theatre Company, though his breakthrough arrived at the hands of the late gangster rapper
Tupac Shakur, who discovered Williams and cast him as his own little brother in the
Julien Temple-directed urban crime drama
Bullet (1995). Work for
Martin Scorsese followed, with a minor role in the grueling psychodrama
Bringing Out the Dead (1999), though Williams scored much broader acclaim and exposure via participation in HBO's popular crime drama series
The Wire, where he played stick-up man Omar Little for multiple seasons. Williams then moved back into features with a supporting turn as Devin in actor-turned-director
Ben Affleck's
Gone Baby Gone (2007), then starred opposite
Viggo Mortensen and
Charlize Theron in director John Hillcoat's post-apocalyptic thriller
The Road (2008). ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide