Artist Profiles

Harry Lennix

A distinguished film, television, stage actor and producer. For the past 10 years, he starred as “Harold Cooper” in NBC’s long-running, hit series The Blacklist. Lennix’s breakout role was “Dresser” in 20th Century Studio’s feature The Five Heartbeats, from director Robert Townsend. He has portrayed fan-favorite characters in blockbuster franchise films such as “General Swanwick/Martian Manhunter” in DC Entertainment’s Man of Steel, Batman vs Superman: Dawn of Justice and Zack Snyder’s Justice League and as “Commander Lock” in Warner Brothers’ The Matrix franchise films The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions. He also starred as “Joe Adams” in the Oscar Award-winning feature Ray.

Lennix received widespread critical acclaim and a Golden Satellite Award as “Aaron” in Julie Taymor’s Titus with Anthony Hopkins and Jessica Lange. Other select film credits over his decades-spanning career include Spike Lee’s Chi-Raq and Clockers, Gina Prince-Bythewood’s Love & Basketball, Stomp the Yard, Canal Street, Nothing Is Impossible, The Last Fall, A Beautiful Soul, State of Play, Resurrecting the Champ, Chrystal, Barbershop 2: Back In Business, Get on the Bus and Bob Roberts. He has also starred in and produced several films for his production company Exponent Media Group.

On television, Lennix garnered acclaim starring as political activist “Adam Clayton Powell, Jr.” in Showtime’s Keep the Faith Baby. For his performance, he won a Black Reel Award and earned Golden Satellite Award and NAACP Image Award Nominations. He also starred as “Jim Gardner,” the Chief of Staff to POTUS, in the Golden Globe-nominated ABC series Commander in Chief, for which he received an NAACP Image Award Nomination. Other television credits include Showtime’s Billions, HBO’s Insecure and Little Britain, CW’s Emily Owens, M.D., NBC’s ER, Fox’s Dollhouse and 24, among many others. He recently lent his voice to Matthew A. Cherry’s animated MAX series Young Love, based on his Oscar-winning short film, Cartoon Network’s Transformers: Robots in Disguise and can soon be heard in Zack Snyder’s animated Netflix series Army of the Dead: Lost Vegas.

In theatre, Lennix made his Broadway debut in August Wilson’s Tony nominated Radio Golf. He also starred in August Wilson’s King Hedley II at the Mark Taper Forum. His portrayal of “Malcolm X” at the Goodman Theater earned him the first Ollie Award. He received Joseph Jefferson Citations for his starring roles in Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom and Caught in the Act. He has directed and appeared in productions across the country including Northlight Theatre Company’s Permanent Collection at LA’s Greenway Arts Alliance, which was later remounted at The Kirk Douglas Theater. He directed the stage version of Robert Townsend’s The Five Heartbeats, which received three NAACP Theater Award Nominations and The Glass Menagerie for Chicago’s Steppenwolf Theatre Company. In 2001, he was part of the first American company to be Invited to the Royal Shakespeare Company in the production of Cymbeline. This spring he returns to the Chicago stage in two new plays: Steppenwolf’s Purpose and Congo Square’s How I Learned What I Learned.

A proud Chicagoan raised on the city’s South Side, Lennix is creating The Lillian Marcie Center and AAMPA (African American Museum of The Performing Arts), an arts complex he calls “the Black version of Lincoln Center.” In 2019 he was named Ambassador for the Prostate Cancer Foundation and brings his message of early detection through PSA’s and public speaking. He serves as Spokesman for NOBLE, the National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives, and is an ambassador to the National Association of Drug Court Professionals. He is on the Advisory Council of Northwestern University, his alma mater, and is a board member of Reading Rescue, a training program for educators teaching reading skills to at-risk elementary school children.

Past Productions

Member Profiles

Harry Lennix

Harry Lennix

NOW ON STAGE