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Vantile Emmanuel Whitfield (September 8, 1930 – January 9, 2005), was an arts administrator who helped found several performing arts institutions in the United States.
- 3
- NAACP Image Award, Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award
- Motojicho
Vantile Whitfield (1930-2005) was a versatile artist who worked in TV, theater, and film. He directed The Third Bill Cosby Special, Tarzan, and Ashes and Embers, and wrote You Stand Like a Fine Brownstone.
- Actor, Director
- September 8, 1930
- Vantile Whitfield
- January 9, 2005
Vantile Whitfield was a director, teacher, playwright, and set designer who worked for the NEA and NBC. He was the father of actor Lance Vantile Whitfield and had three marriages and three children.
- September 8, 1930
- January 9, 2005
23 de jan. de 2005 · Vantile Whitfield, known as "Motojicho," an influential playwright, director of stage and screen and founding director of the Expansion Arts program at the National Endowment of the Arts, died...
- Yvonne Shinhoster Lamb
1970s. Following graduation, she first garnered attention on the stage by performing with the Black Repertory Company in Washington, D.C. She married playwright/director/actor Vantile Whitfield, one of the company's co-founders and a pioneer of black theatre, in 1974.
10 de set. de 2023 · 30 subscribers. 10. 4K views 12 years ago. Sonya Geder Diggs in association with Conscious Comedy Concepts and UnaStar Media are currently in production of a documentary: "A Man for all Reasons;...
- 5 min
- 4,1K
- Arkad Ajah Battle
Vantile Emmanuel Whitfield, African American playwright and director known as Motojicho, was born on September 8, 1930, in Washington, D.C. to Theodore Roosevelt Whitfield and Lugene Ellen Green. He attended Dunbar High School, graduating in 1948. Following high school, he joined the Air Force and served until 1952.