As a lead actor in films, Poitier got out of the gate first, with a groundbreaking lead role in Joseph Mankiewicz’s No Way Out (1950). He got it because of a series of events that followed from Belafonte having to miss an American Negro Theater performance in the lead role of a play called Days of Our Youth because he couldn’t get someone to cover for him at his janitorial job. So his understudy Poitier went on instead and was seen by the right people to help his career that night.

Belafonte and Poitier both hailed from the West Indies. Both were born in America but returned to family roots, with Poitier largely raised in the Bahamas and Belafonte in Jamaica. Both got their starts as performers at the American Negro Theater in New York City, both supported themselves with custodial work, and both had huge ambitions to be actors and stars.

While Poitier stayed steadily on course, Belafonte took an unexpected side route to his goal. He put together a nightclub act, singing folk songs and getting increasingly well known for songs derived from the Afro-Caribbean calypso tradition. He became such a success, especially while performing at the Village Vanguard and the Blue Angel in New York, that he was offered the male lead in the MGM movie Bright Road (1953), a quiet study of small-town educators trying to help a struggling black student, co-starring Dorothy Dandridge.

But Belafonte is such a beguiling presence in film, as in music, that it seems hardly to matter if in some technical way he wasn’t considered by some to be as “brilliant” and “amazing” as he seemed. Certainly, he didn’t have the titanic acting talent of Poitier, but then, almost nobody else did either.

Belafonte’s film career is a sparse one. By his own account, this is because he was appalled by almost all the roles that were offered to him. But no one would have guessed it would go that way in the early 1950s, when his nightclub and recording career was red hot, and he was so dazzlingly handsome and charming, he was cutting a big swath through various areas of showbiz.

Being built up as a major Hollywood leading man, he was several times co-starred with Dandridge, whose light-skinned beauty and wide-ranging talent as an actor, singer, and dancer made her the female equivalent to Belafonte in terms of what Hollywood executives regarded as promising prospects to become pioneering black stars of the civil rights era. Their work in Bright Road (1953), Carmen Jones (1954), and Island in the Sun (1957) made Belafonte a clear competitor with Poitier as black leading men on the big screen.

At the same time, Belafonte was seriously involved in the civil rights movement. He was a part of Martin Luther King Jr’s inner circle, personally financing King, his family, and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. His mentor was Paul Robeson, the brilliant actor and singer whose commitment to communism got him blacklisted, costing him his American career, his health, and very nearly his sanity. But Belafonte was undeterred. His strongly outspoken left-wing activism was bound to tell on his own professional path in ways that it never would with the more careful and pliant Poitier.

Ultimately, he couldn’t stomach Hollywood and turned his back on film stardom, saying,

I put script after script before people who just rejected them out of hand, and I just said there’s no point in trying to change this monster. . . . Hollywood was symptomatic, and the problem was the nation: I figured unless you change the national vocabulary, the national climate, the national attitude, you’re not going to be able to change Hollywood.

But before he left, Belafonte made a defiant last stand, forming his own company called HarBel Productions in order to make two compelling films in rapid succession: Odds Against Tomorrow (1959), and The World, the Flesh and the Devil (1959). Both are tough urban films, mostly set in New York City, and both tackle racism head-on.

Odds Against Tomorrow really showcases Belafonte’s savvy, ambition, and defiance of the Hollywood system. He hired blacklisted writer Abraham Polonsky, who’s best known for his searing noirs Body and Soul (1947) and Force of Evil (1948), to do this updated film noir. To serve as Polonsky’s “front” at a time when he couldn’t be officially credited for screenplays because of the Hollywood blacklist of writers associated with communism, Belafonte chose black novelist John Oliver Killens. Robert Wise, working in the gritty urban mode of perhaps his best and certainly his harshest films The Set-up (1949) and I Want to Live! (1958), was a prominent film industry liberal, and the cast of the movie was a who’s-who of Hollywood leftists including Robert Ryan, Ed Begley, and Shelley Winters.

Odds Against Tomorrow is about a bound-to-fail robbery, a type of film familiar to noir fans who’ve seen Criss Cross (1949), The Asphalt Jungle (1950), Armored Car Robbery (1950), and The Killing (1956). This time, the robbery has been masterminded by an aging, impoverished ex-cop, David Burke (Begley). He has two other hard-luck men in mind to fill out his team: his friend, nightclub singer Johnny Ingram (Belafonte), a cool dude who’s also a compulsive gambler and owes money to the mob, and Earle Slater (Ryan), a tough, embittered ex-con who never regained his equilibrium after returning from World War II and is reluctantly supported by his girlfriend Lorry (Winters) while he tries to get on his feet.

Slater is also a Southern racist, which doesn’t bode well for the success of the robbery. He doesn’t want to work with a black man, and Ingram also refuses to do the job, based on his gambler’s instinct that this enterprise is a hundred-to-one shot. But Burke is desperate, and he does his damnedest to amplify the desperation of the two other men.

In order for the robbery to come off, Burke specifically needs a tall, thin black man, to take the place of the restaurant deliveryman who brings dinner to the elderly bank guards each night. It’s a bitter point in a film dealing directly with harsh racist realities that it can be assumed the bank guards won’t recognize that it’s not the same deliveryman who brings them dinner every single night, as long as he’s black.

Burke resorts to going behind Ingram’s back to an old crony, the mafioso holding Ingram’s IOUs, persuading him to threaten Ingram with death if he doesn’t pay up in twenty-four hours. Ultimately, this will force Ingram into taking the job. But before he’s told that’s an option, we follow him as he spends what he believes is the last day of his life.

In order to deal with his life as a black man, Ingram has adopted the persona of what was once known as a “sport,” a high-liver who gambles big, often in the world of sports, which is where the term comes from. He also tends to dress sharp, drink hard, drive a flashy car, love the night life, and cut a swath with women. It’s a devil-may-care persona that was a provocative one in an American black man of the early to mid-twentieth century, maddening to white bigots because a sport’s elan represented such a dauntless enjoyment of life.

In Odds Against Tomorrow, Belafonte’s Ingram is such a snazzy sport, the young black elevator operator who runs him up to Burke’s apartment to discuss the robbery can only gaze at him in smiling awe. But his ex-wife Ruth (Kim Hamilton) isn’t so appreciative and divorced him specifically to prevent his attitudes from rubbing off on their nine-year-old daughter, Eadie (Lois Thorne). Ruth sees clearly that his entrenched rage and defiance of white supremacy underlies the good-time Charlie veneer. In turn, he fiercely rejects what he regards as her gullible liberalism, accusing her of making nice with white people who will never really accept her as an equal.

Ingram spends what he thinks is his last day with Eadie, taking her to the amusement park and periodically darting off while she’s on rides to make urgent calls, trying to negotiate any kind of way out of his predicament. But as far as he knows, he’s still under sentence of death when he goes to perform at the club that night. It’s a world Belafonte knew intimately, and these scenes might represent his best performance on film, as he drinks heavily and performs wildly, providing an unrehearsed counterpoint-chorus to the main singer (“All men are evil!”), who doesn’t appreciate him crabbing her act.

His sport persona is so well established, however, that his frenzied behaviour that night reads as just Johnny’s ebullience reaching a zanier level. All that will fall away under the pressure of the heist, as Ingram’s essential rage finally burns through the veneer.

In the end, he’d rather kill Slater than escape the police, which he could easily do after the robbery goes wrong. And Slater would also rather kill him, so the film ends with simultaneous murder and a recreation of the gas-tank explosions that were the climactic scene in another film noir, White Heat (1949), starring James Cagney. Only there’s no psychotically gleeful “Top of the world, Ma!” to this ending. It’s a straight, solemn allegory arguing mutually assured destruction, a kind of racial Armageddon, several years before James Baldwin was going on talk shows, telling white hosts and audiences that without significant socio-political change, “We’re going to burn down your house.”

The end of the world goes from symbolic final images in Odds Against Tomorrow to the main narrative content of Belafonte’s other independently produced film, The World, the Flesh and the Devil. Though it suffers in terms of direction: Ranald MacDougall is no Wise, though he was another Hollywood leftist typical of those who worked with Belafonte on the films he produced, the son of a union organizer who rose out of poverty to become a successful screenwriter (Mildred Pierce, The Unsuspected) before trying his hand at directing.

But the film features an impressive star turn by Belafonte as Pennsylvania mine inspector Ralph Burton, whose seeming bad luck in being trapped for days after a mine cave-in proves fortunate when it allows him to survive a nuclear war and the fallout that’s only deadly for five days.

Belafonte is alone onscreen for the first half-hour of the film, which is arguably the best half-hour. He’s a captivating presence on-screen, relaxed and graceful, handling all physical “business” convincingly, a compulsively watchable actor. There’s a wonderful interlude when Ralph is trying to keep himself sane while trapped underground and turns his tapping on pipes, trying to communicate with anyone above who might hear, into a catchy, humorous, impromptu song: “I don’t like it, I don’t like it, I don’t like it here. Nobody likes it, nobody likes it, nobody likes it here!”

He finally emerges into a desolate world. From discarded newspapers, he learns that the United Nations retaliated against the use of weaponized atomic toxins, which led to millions fleeing for their lives. The deserted streets only get eerier when he takes a truck and drives to New York City, figuring there will be living people there if anywhere. Belafonte running through the empty gray canyons of the city are among the searing images of film noir.

A leading civil rights activist till his last day of long 96 year long life, Belafonte always fought for racial equality while admitting that America is a great land for fighting for aspirations. A music and acting genius from his early youth, Belafonte’s death is a big loss to the cultural arena, not only of the American continent but also to the world as a whole. (Jacobin — IPA Service)